Light module and lighting device having same

ABSTRACT

A lighting module disclosed in an embodiment comprises: a substrate; a light-emitting element arranged on the substrate; and a resin member arranged on the substrate and the light-emitting element. The resin member comprises a plurality of side surfaces and an exit surface on the upper portion thereof. The plurality of side surfaces of the resin member comprise a first side surface adjacent to the light emitting device, a second side surface facing the first side surface, and third and fourth side surfaces arranged between the first and second side surfaces so as to face each other. The exit surface of the resin member comprises a light extraction structure having a large length in a first direction and having a concavo-convex pattern in a second direction that is perpendicular to the first direction. The light emitting device comprises an exit area corresponding to a part of the second side surface in the first direction. The thickness of the second side surface, in connection with the resin member, may be smaller than the thickness of the first side surface.

CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED PATENT APPLICATIONS

This application is a continuation application of prior U.S. patentapplication Ser. No. 16/098,645 filed Nov. 2, 2018, which is a U.S.National Stage Application under 35 U.S.C. § 371 of PCT Application No.PCT/KR2017/004594, filed Apr. 28, 2017, which claims priority to KoreanPatent Application No, 10-2016-0055778, filed May 4, 2016, Korean PatentApplication No. 10-2016-0111054, filed Aug. 30, 2016, Korean PatentApplication No. 10-2017-0030144, filed. Mar. 9, 2017, and Korean PatentApplication No. 10-2017-0030165, Mar. 9, 2017, whose entire disclosuresare hereby incorporated by reference.

TECHNICAL FIELD

Embodiment relates to a lighting module to provide a surface lightsource which has a plurality of light emitting diode.

Embodiment relates to a lighting device having a lighting module.

Embodiment relates to a backlight unit, a liquid crystal display device,a vehicle lamp having a lamp module.

BACKGROUND ART

Conventional lighting applications include not only a vehicle lightingbut also a backlight for a display and a signage.

A light emitting device, for example, a light emitting diode (LED) hasadvantages such as low power consumption, semi-permanent lifetime, fastresponse speed, safety, environmental friendliness compared toconventional light sources such as fluorescent lamps and incandescentlamps. Such an LED has been applied to various lighting devices such asvarious display devices, indoor lights or outdoor lights, or the like.

Recently, a lamp employing an LED has been proposed as a vehicle lightsource. Compared to incandescent lamps, an LED has an advantage in lowpower consumption. However, since an emitting angle of light emittedfrom an LED is small, when the LED is used as a vehicle lamp, it isrequired to increase a light emitting area of a lamp using the LED.

Since a size of an LEI) is small, it is possible to increase a degree offreedom of design of a lamp, and the LED has economic efficiency due tothe semi-permanent lifetime.

DISCLOSURE Technical Problem

An embodiment provides a lighting device having a resin member for asurface light source.

An embodiment provides a lighting module with improved light extractionefficiency and light distribution characteristics.

An embodiment provides a lighting module having a resin member thatcovers a plurality of light emitting devices and has a light extractionstructure disposed at an upper portion thereof.

An embodiment provides a lighting module having a reflective memberdisposed at a lower portion of a resin member covering a plurality oflight emitting devices.

An embodiment provides a lighting module in which a pattern of a lightextraction structure disposed at an upper portion of a resin member isarranged in a direction orthogonal to or in the same direction as anarrangement direction of the light emitting devices.

An embodiment provides a lighting module in which a resin member havinga light extraction structure at an upper portion thereof has the samethickness or a region far from a light emitting device has a thinthickness.

An embodiment provides a lighting module in which a resin member havinga light extraction structure has a gradually thinner thickness as it isfarther from an exit surface of a light emitting device.

An embodiment provides a lighting module having a reflective portion anda light extraction structure at an exit surface of a resin membercovering a light emitting device.

An embodiment provides a lighting module having a protrusion portioncovering a light emitting device in a resin member.

An embodiment provides a lighting module having a protrusion portioncovering a light emitting device in a resin member and a curved surfacebetween the convex portion and a light exit structure.

An embodiment provides a lighting module having a protrusion portion anda recess corresponding to the protrusion portion on opposite sides of aresin member.

An embodiment provides a light emitting cell or a lighting module havinga protrusion portion covering a light emitting device in a resin member,a reflective portion with a curved surface and an exit portion having alight extraction structure.

An embodiment provides a lighting module in which a recess and aprotrusion portion which are coupled to each other in resin membersseparated from each other are disposed and a lighting device having thesame.

An embodiment provides a lighting module in which light extractionstructures having a different size or shape from each other are disposedat an exit surface of a resin member covering a light emitting device.

An embodiment provides a lighting module in which a plurality of concaveportions and/or convex portions are disposed at an exit surface of aresin member covering a light emitting device.

An embodiment provides a lighting module in which concave curvedsurfaces disposed at an exit surface of a resin member reflect ortransmit light incident from a light emitting device, thereby improvingcentral luminous intensity.

An embodiment provides a lighting module in which a concave reflectiveregion of a resin member reflects or transmits light incident from alight emitting device, thereby improving central luminous intensity.

An embodiment provides a light emitting cell or a lighting module havinga reflective member that reflects light emitted from a light emittingdevice between a resin member and a substrate.

An embodiment provides a lighting module in which light emitting cellshaving a light emitting device and a resin member are arranged in onedirection and a lighting device having the same.

An embodiment provides a lighting module irradiating a surface lightsource and a lighting device having the same.

An embodiment may provide a vehicle lamp having a lighting moduleirradiating a surface light source.

An embodiment may provide a backlight unit or a liquid crystal displaydevice having a lighting module irradiating a surface light source.

Technical Solution

A lighting module according to an embodiment includes: a substrate; alight emitting device disposed on the substrate; and a resin memberdisposed on the substrate and the light emitting device, wherein theresin member includes a plurality of side surfaces and an exit surfaceon an upper portion thereof, the plurality of side surfaces of the resinmember include a first side surface adjacent to the light emittingdevice, a second side surface facing the first side surface, and a thirdside surface and a fourth side surface disposed between the first andsecond side surfaces and facing each other, and the exit surface of theresin member includes a light extraction structure having a long lengthin a first direction and having a concavo-convex pattern in a seconddirection orthogonal to the first direction, the light emitting deviceincludes an emitting region corresponding to a portion of the secondside surface in the first direction, and a thickness of the second sidesurface may be smaller than that of the first side surface in the resinmember.

A lighting module according to an embodiment includes: a substrate; alight emitting device disposed on the substrate; and a resin memberdisposed on the light emitting device, wherein the resin member includesa side surface and an exit surface on an upper portion thereof, the sidesurface of the resin member includes a first side surface adjacent tothe light emitting device, a second side surface facing the first sidesurface, a third side surface disposed between the first and second sidesurfaces, and a fourth side surface facing the third side surface, theexit surface of the resin member includes a plurality of concaveportions with a concave curved surface and a convex portion disposedbetween the concave portions, the concave portion has a longer length ina first direction and disposed in plural in a second direction from thefirst side surface toward the second side surface of the resin member,the exit surface of the resin member includes a first region including aconcave portion adjacent to the first side surface and at least aportion of which is overlapped with the light emitting device in avertical direction, a second region including a region in which avirtual straight line connecting at least two uppermost ends of theconvex portions is inclined, a third region including at least oneconcave portion disposed between the second region and the second sidesurface, and a fourth region including at least one concave portiondisposed between the third region and the second side surface, and inthe third region, a distance between the substrate and the uppermost endof the convex portion adjacent to the second region may be smaller thana distance between the substrate and the uppermost end of the convexportion adjacent to the fourth region.

A lighting module according to an embodiment includes: a substrate; alight emitting device disposed on the substrate; and a resin memberdisposed on the light emitting device, wherein the resin member includesa side surface and an exit surface on an upper portion thereof, the sidesurface of the resin member includes a first side surface adjacent tothe light emitting device, a second side surface facing the first sidesurface, a third side surface disposed between the first and second sidesurfaces, and a fourth side surface facing the third side surface, theexit surface of the resin member includes a light extraction structurehaving a long length in a first direction and a concavo-convex patternin a second direction orthogonal to the first direction, the exitsurface of the resin member includes a first region at least a portionof which is overlapped with the light emitting device in a verticaldirection, a second region including a concave portion having apredetermined depth in a direction of the substrate between the firstregion and the second side surface, and a third region disposed betweenthe second region and the second side surface, the light extractionstructure disposed in the first region has a long length in the firstdirection and is disposed in the second direction, the second region hasa height lower than a height of an uppermost end of the first region,the concave portion of the second region includes a first reflectivesurface having a surface inclined in a direction toward the substrate,and a second reflective surface having a surface inclined in a directionaway from the substrate, the first and second reflective surfaces have along length in the first direction, and the light extraction structuredisposed in the third region has a long length in the first directionand is disposed in the second direction, and a lowermost end of theconcave portion may be higher than an upper surface of the lightemitting device and may not be overlapped with the light emitting deviceand the substrate in the vertical direction.

According to an embodiment, a boundary portion between the first andsecond reflective surfaces of the second region may be a low point ofthe second region, a distance between a straight line perpendicular tothe low point of the second region and an emitting region of the lightemitting device may be a, and when a distance between a straight linehorizontal to the low point of the second region and the upper surfaceof the light emitting device is b, a ratio of the a:b may be in a rangefrom 1:1 to 1:2˜2:1 to 1:1, and a maximum value of the a, b may be lessthan or equal to a thickness of the light emitting device.

According to an embodiment, a thickness of the resin member may becomegradually smaller as it is farther from the light emitting device, or adistance from the substrate may become gradually smaller.

According to an embodiment, the resin member may be arranged in pluralin the first direction on the substrate, and the light emitting devicemay be disposed in each of the resin members, and the light emittingdevices disposed in the plurality of resin members may be disposed inthe first direction.

According to an embodiment, at least one of a multilayered reflectivemember and a single-layered reflective layer is disposed between theresin member and the substrate.

According to an embodiment, the resin member may include a first regionin which the light emitting device is disposed, and a second regionbetween the first region and the second side surface, and the lightextraction structure may be disposed on the first and second regions,and the light extraction structure of the second region may have agradually lower height as it is farther from the light emitting device.

According to an embodiment, the resin member may include adjacent firstand second resin members, the light emitting device may include a firstlight emitting device disposed adjacent to a first side surface of thefirst resin member and a second light emitting device disposed adjacentto a first side surface of the second resin member, and the first andsecond resin members may include a protrusion portion covering the firstand second light emitting devices.

According to an embodiment, the first resin member may have a concaverecess in a direction of the first light emitting device from the secondside surface, a protrusion portion of the second resin member may bedisposed in the recess of the first resin member, and an upper surfaceof the protrusion portion may have a rough surface.

According to an embodiment, the exit surface of the resin member mayinclude a first region adjacent to the first side surface, a secondregion overlapped with the light emitting device in the verticaldirection, and a third region between the second region and the thirdside surface, the second region may include at least one of a concaveportion and a convex portion, the concave portion having a concavecurved surface and a long length in the second direction of the resinmember, and the second region may be disposed lower than an uppersurface of the first region.

According to an embodiment, the exit surface of the resin member mayinclude a plurality of concave portions having a concave curved surfaceand a convex portion disposed between the concave portions, the concaveportions may have a long length in the first direction, and bealternately arranged in the second direction from the first side surfacetoward the second side surface of the resin member, the exit surface ofthe resin member may include a first region including a concave portionadjacent to the first side surface and at least a portion of which isoverlapped with the light emitting device in the vertical direction, asecond region including a region in which a virtual straight lineconnecting at least two uppermost ends of the convex portions isinclined, a third region including at least one concave portion disposedbetween the second region and the second side surface, and a fourthregion including at least one concave portion disposed between the thirdregion and the second side surface.

According to an embodiment, in the third region, a distance between thesubstrate and the uppermost end of the convex portion adjacent to thesecond region may be smaller than a distance between the substrate andthe uppermost end of the convex portion adjacent to the fourth region,and a height of the convex portion disposed in the first region may behigher than a height of the convex portion disposed in the third region,and the convex portion disposed in the fourth region may have agradually lower height as it is adjacent to the second side surface ofthe resin member.

According to an embodiment, the exit surface of the resin member mayinclude a first region at least a portion of which is overlapped withthe light emitting device in the vertical direction, a second regionincluding a concave portion having a predetermined depth in thedirection of the substrate between the first region and the second sidesurface, and a third region disposed between the second region and thesecond side surface, wherein the light extraction structure disposed inthe first region may have a long length in the first direction and bedisposed in the second direction, the second region may have a heightlower than a height of an uppermost end of the first region, the concaveportion of the second region may include a first reflective surfacehaving a surface inclined in the direction toward the substrate, and asecond reflective surface having a surface inclined in the directionaway from the substrate, wherein the first and second reflectivesurfaces may have a long length in the first direction, and the lightextraction structure disposed in the third region may have a long lengthin the first direction and be disposed in the second direction, and thelowermost end of the concave portion may be higher than the uppersurface of the light emitting device and may not be overlapped with thelight emitting device and the substrate in the vertical direction.

Advantageous Effects

According to a lighting module according to an embodiment, luminousintensity of a surface light source may be improved.

According to an embodiment, a lighting module can improve centralluminous intensity of a surface light source emitted from each lightemitting cell.

According to a lighting module according to an embodiment, lightuniformity of a surface light source may be improved.

An embodiment can reduce a loss of light and may disperse light by usinga light emitting device and a resin member having a light extractionstructure on a substrate.

An embodiment has an effect of preventing a hot spot by disposing areflective portion in a region of a resin member adjacent to a lightemitting device.

An embodiment can reduce a difference in luminous intensity in a regionbetween adjacent resin members by overlapping adjacent resin memberswith a structure of a recess and a protrusion portion.

According to an embodiment, it is possible to reduce a loss of light anddisperse light by disposing concave curved surfaces in different exitregions of a resin member covering a light emitting device.

An embodiment has an effect of preventing a hot spot by disposing aconcave curved surface in an exit region of a resin member covering alight emitting device.

An embodiment may improve luminous efficiency and light distributioncharacteristics of light emitting cells.

An embodiment may improve optical reliability of a lighting moduleaccording to an embodiment and a lighting device having the same.

An embodiment may improve reliability of a vehicle lighting devicehaving a lighting module according to an embodiment.

An embodiment can be applied to a backlight unit having a lightingmodule, various display devices, a surface light source lighting device,and a vehicle lamp.

An embodiment may improve optical reliability of a lighting moduleaccording to an embodiment and a lighting device having the same.

DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS

FIG. 1 is a side cross-sectional view illustrating a lighting moduleaccording to the first embodiment.

FIG. 2 is an example of a plan view of the lighting module of FIG. 1.

FIG. 3 is a perspective view showing an example of the light extractionstructure of the resin member in a light module according to anembodiment.

FIG. 4 is a perspective view showing another example of the lightextraction structure of the resin member in a light module according toan embodiment.

FIG. 5 is a cross-sectional view showing a first modification of thelight extraction structure of the resin member in accordance with anembodiment.

FIG. 6 is a cross-sectional view showing a second modification of thelight extraction structure of the resin member in accordance with anembodiment.

FIG. 7 is a side cross-sectional view of the reflective member of thelighting module according to an embodiment.

FIG. 8 is an example of a reflection pattern of the reflective member ofFIG. 7.

FIG. 9 is a side cross-sectional view of a lighting module according tothe second embodiment.

FIG. 10 is a view showing an example of the light extraction structureof the resin member of the light module of FIG. 9.

FIG. 11 is a perspective view of a lighting module according to thethird embodiment.

FIG. 12 is a partial side cross-sectional view of the lighting module ofFIG. 11.

FIG. 13 is a view for explaining a light extraction structure of theresin member in the lighting module of FIG. 12.

FIG. 14 is an example of a partial top view of the lighting module ofFIG. 12.

FIG. 15 is another example of the light extraction structure of FIG. 13.

FIG. 16 is an example of a side cross-sectional view of the lightingmodule of FIG. 11.

FIG. 17 is a side cross-sectional view illustrating a first modificationof the lighting module of FIG. 16.

FIG. 18 is a side cross-sectional view illustrating a secondmodification of the lighting module of FIG. 16.

FIG. 19 is a perspective view illustrating a third modification of thelighting module of FIG. 11.

FIG. 20 is a partial side cross-sectional view of the lighting module ofFIG. 19.

FIG. 21 is a plan view showing another example of the lighting module ofFIG. 14.

FIG. 22 is a side cross-sectional view of the lighting device having thelighting module of FIG. 16.

FIG. 23 is another side cross-sectional view of the lighting device ofFIG. 22.

FIG. 24 is a plan view of a lighting module according to the fourthembodiment.

FIG. 25 is a side cross-sectional view of the lighting module of FIG.24.

FIG. 26 is a perspective view of the lighting module arrangement of FIG.24.

FIG. 27 is a plan view of the lighting module of FIG. 26.

FIG. 28 is a side cross-sectional view of the lighting module of FIG.26.

FIG. 29 is a partially enlarged view of FIG. 28.

FIG. 30 is a front view of the lighting module of FIG. 26.

FIG. 31 is a rear view of the lighting module of FIG. 26.

FIG. 32 is a side cross-sectional view of the lighting module of FIG.26.

FIG. 33 is an enlarged view of the lighting module or light emittingcell of FIG. 32.

FIG. 34 is a cross-sectional view illustrating a reflective portion ofthe resin member of the lighting module of FIG. 33.

FIG. 35 is a further example of the reflective portion of the resinmember of FIG. 34.

FIG. 36 is a perspective view showing a first modification of thelighting module of FIG. 24 or FIG. 26.

FIG. 37 is a partial perspective view of the lighting module of FIG. 36.

FIG. 38 is a front view of the lighting module of FIG. 36.

FIG. 39 is a partial side cross-sectional view of the lighting module ofFIG. 36.

FIG. 40 is a second modification of the lighting module of FIG. 24 orFIG. 26.

FIG. 41 is a partially enlarged view of the lighting module of FIG. 40.

FIG. 42 is a front view of the lighting module of FIG. 40.

FIG. 43 is a partial side cross-sectional view of the lighting module ofFIG. 40.

FIG. 44 is a perspective view showing a third modification of thelighting module of FIG. 24 or FIG. 26.

FIG. 45 is a diagram showing a front view of the lighting module of FIG.44.

FIG. 46 is a perspective view showing a fourth modification of thelighting module of FIG. 24 or FIG. 26.

FIGS. 47 to 50 are a view showing a modified example of the protrusionand the recess of the resin member in a light module according to afourth embodiment.

FIG. 51 is a view showing an example the lighting module of FIG. 24 orFIG. 26 which is arranged in different directions.

FIG. 52 is a view showing an example of the lighting module of FIG. 24or FIG. 26 which is arranged in a curved form.

FIG. 53 is a side cross-sectional view of the lighting device having thelighting module of FIG. 26.

FIG. 54 is a perspective view of a lighting module according to thefifth embodiment.

FIG. 55 is a partial side cross-sectional view of the lighting module ofFIG. 54.

FIG. 56 is a partial plan view of the lighting module of FIG. 54.

FIG. 57 is a B-B side cross-sectional view of the lighting module ofFIG. 56.

FIG. 58 is a side cross-sectional view of the lighting module of FIG.56.

FIG. 59 is a partially enlarged view of the lighting module of FIG. 58.

FIG. 60 is a partially enlarged view of the lighting module of FIG. 58.

FIG. 61 is a view for explaining a light extracting path from thelighting module of FIG. 58.

FIG. 62 is an example showing the structure of the reflective memberremoved from the lighting module of FIG. 58.

FIG. 63 is a perspective view showing a first modification of thelighting module of FIG. 54.

FIG. 64 is a plan view showing a second modification of the lightingmodule of FIG. 54.

FIG. 65 is a plan view showing a third modification of the lightingmodule of FIG. 54.

FIG. 66 is a side cross-sectional view of the lighting device having thelighting module of FIG. 55.

FIG. 67 is a perspective view of a lighting module according to thesixth embodiment.

FIG. 68 is a partial plan view of the lighting module of FIG. 67.

FIG. 69 is a side cross-sectional view of the lighting module of FIG.68.

FIG. 70 is a partially enlarged view of the lighting module of FIG. 69.

FIG. 71 is a view illustrating a second region in the lighting module ofFIG. 69.

FIG. 72 is a plan view showing another example of the resin member inthe lighting module of FIG. 68.

FIG. 73 is a side cross-sectional view of the lighting module of FIG.72.

FIG. 74 is a partially enlarged view of the lighting module of FIG. 73.

FIG. 75 is a side cross-sectional view showing a first modification ofthe lighting module of FIG. 69.

FIG. 76 is a partially enlarged view of the lighting module of FIG. 75.

FIG. 77 is a view for explaining the light path of the lighting moduleof FIG. 76.

FIG. 78 is a view illustrating a second region in the lighting module ofFIG. 76.

FIG. 79 is a perspective view showing a second modification of thelighting module 67.

FIG. 80 is a partial side cross-sectional view of the lighting module ofFIG. 79.

FIG. 81 is a partially enlarged view of first and second regions of thelighting module of FIG. 81.

FIG. 82 is an enlarged view of the first area of the lighting module ofFIG. 80.

FIG. 83 is an enlarged view of the third area of the lighting module ofFIG. 80.

FIG. 84 is a view for explaining an example of the light extractionstructure of the lighting module according to the sixth embodiment.

FIG. 85 (a) and (b) are a view for explaining another example of thelight extraction structure in FIG. 84.

FIGS. 86 to 88 are a view for explaining the manufacturing process ofthe resin member of the lighting module of FIG. 80.

FIG. 89 is a side cross-sectional view of a lighting device having alighting module according to an embodiment.

FIG. 90 is a front view showing a light emitting device of a lightingmodule according to an embodiment.

FIG. 91 is an A-A side cross-sectional view of the light emitting deviceof FIG. 90.

FIG. 92 is a front view of the light emitting device in FIG. 90 disposedon a substrate.

FIG. 93 is a side view of the light emitting device of FIG. 92 disposedon a substrate.

FIG. 94 is a view showing a lamp having a lighting device provided witha lighting module according to an embodiment.

FIG. 95 is a plan view of a vehicle in which the vehicle lamp of FIG. 94is applied.

FIG. 96 is a view showing the brightness of the lighting deviceaccording to the fifth embodiment and the sixth embodiment.

MODES OF THE INVENTION

Hereinafter, preferred embodiments of the present invention will bedescribed in detail with reference to the accompanying drawings, inwhich a person having ordinary skill in the art to which the presentinvention pertains can easily implement the present invention. However,it should be understood that embodiments described in the specificationand configurations illustrated in the drawings are merely a preferredembodiment of the present invention, and there are various equivalentsand modifications that can substitute the embodiments and configurationsat the time of filing the present application.

In describing operating principles of a preferred embodiment of thepresent invention in detail, when detailed description of a knownfunction or configuration is deemed to unnecessarily blur the gist ofthe present disclosure, the detailed description will be omitted. Termsto be described below are defined as terms defined in consideration offunctions of the present invention and meaning of each term should beinterpreted based on the contents throughout the specification. The samereference numerals are used for parts having similar functions andactions throughout the drawings.

A lighting device according to the present invention may be applied tovarious lamp devices requiring lighting, for example, a vehicle lamp, ahome lighting device, or an industrial lighting device. For example,when a lighting device is applied to a vehicle lamp, it may be appliedto a head lamp, a side mirror lamp, a fog lamp, a tail lamp, a stoplamp, a side marker lamp, a daytime running light, a vehicle interiorlighting, a door scarf, rear combination lamps, a backup lamp, and thelike. The lighting device of the present invention may also be appliedto indoor and outdoor advertisement apparatus fields, and also may beapplicable to all other lighting-related fields andadvertisement-related fields that are currently being developed andcommercialized or that may be implemented by technological developmentin the future.

Hereinafter, embodiments will be shown more apparent through thedescription of the appended drawings and embodiments. In the descriptionof the embodiments, in the case in which each layer (film), area, pad orpattern is described as being formed “on” or “under” each layer (film),area, pad or pattern, the “on” and “under” include both of forming“directly” and “indirectly”. Also, the reference for determining “on” or“under” each layer will be described based on the figures.

First Embodiment

FIG. 1 is a side cross-sectional view of a lighting module according toa first embodiment, and FIG. 2 is another example of the lighting moduleof FIG. 1.

Referring to FIGS. 1 and 2, a lighting module 200 according to anembodiment includes a substrate 201, a plurality of light emittingdevices 100 disposed on the substrate 201, and a resin member 150covering the substrate 201 and the light emitting devices 100, and areflective member 110 disposed between the resin member 150 and thesubstrate 201.

The substrate 201 includes a printed circuit board (PCB). The substrate201 may include, for example, a resin-based circuit board (PCB), a metalcore (Metal Core) PCB, a flexible PCB, a ceramic PCB, and a FR-4substrate. When the substrate 201 is disposed in a metal core PCBdisposed with a metal layer on a bottom, a heat dissipation efficiencyof the light emitting device 100 can be improved. The substrate 201 maybe a flexible substrate or a non-flexible substrate.

The substrate 201 comprises a wiring layer (not shown) at an upperportion thereof, the wiring layer may be electrically connected to theplurality of light emitting devices 100. The plurality of light emittingdevices 100 may be connected in series, in parallel, or aseries-parallel by the wiring layer, but the embodiment is not limitedthereto. The substrate 201 may function as a base member located on abase of the light emitting device 100 and the reflective member 110.

An upper surface of the substrate 201 has an X-axis and Y-axis plane,and a thickness of the substrate 201 may be a height of a Z directionperpendicular to X-axis and Y-axis. Here, a Y direction is a firstdirection, an X direction is a second direction perpendicular to the Yaxis, and the Z direction may be a third direction perpendicular to theX and Y axes. A length of the Y direction and a length of the Xdirection of the substrate 201 is the same or different from each other,for example, the length of the Y direction may be longer than the lengthin the X direction.

As shown in FIG. 92 and FIG. 93, the light emitting device 100 may bedisposed on the substrate 201. The plurality of light emitting device100 may be arranged in a predetermined distances B5 on the substrate201, or may be arranged in a different distance to each other. The lightemitting devices 100 is arranged at least one column, two columns ormore on the substrate 201, and the first column or the second column ormore of the light emitting devices 100 is disposed in a length directionof the substrate 201, that is, may be disposed in a first direction Y.For convenience of description, the embodiment will be described as anexample in which the plurality of light emitting devices 100 arearranged in one column in the first direction Y. The distance betweenthe light emitting devices 100 may have a 100 mm or less, for example,in a range of 5 mm to 100 mm or in a range of 10 mm to 40 mm. If thedistance B5 between adjacent light emitting devices 100 is more than theabove range, it is difficult to control a desired amount of light orlight uniformity.

The light emitting device 100 is a device having a light emitting diode(LED) and includes an LED chip or a package which is packaged with theLED chip, and the LED chip may emit at least one of a blue light, a redlight, a green light, an ultraviolet (UV) light. The light emittingdevice may emit light in a white, blue, red, at least one of green. Thelight emitting device 100 may be a side view type which a bottom portionof the light emitting device is electrically connected to the substrate201, but the embodiment is not limited thereto. As another example, thelight emitting device 100 may be a LED chip, but the embodiment is notlimited thereto. A plurality of light emitting devices 100 disposed inthe lighting module may emit light of the same color to each other. Theplurality of light emitting devices 100 may emit light of a single colorin one direction.

An emitting region 101 of the light emitting device 100 may be disposedon a surface adjacent to the substrate 201, for example, on a sidesurface adjacent to an upper surface of the substrate 201. The emittingregion 101 is disposed to a side surface between a bottom surface and anupper surface of the light emitting device 100 and emits light in thefirst direction Y. The emitting region 101 of the light emitting device100 is a surface adjacent to the reflective member 110, or may be asurface perpendicular to the upper surface of the substrate 201 and/orthe upper surface of the reflective member 110.

The optical axis Y0 of light emitted through the emitting region 101 ofthe light emitting device 100 is in a direction parallel with the uppersurface of the substrate 201, or may be tilted within a range of 30degrees or less with respect to a horizontal axis to the upper surfaceof the substrate 201. The optical axis Y0 may be a horizontal lightemitted from the light emitting device 100 or a direction orthogonal toan upper surface of the LED chip in the light emitting device 100. Thelight emitting device 100 may have a wide light-oriented angle in the ±Xdirection than the light-oriented angle in the ±Z direction. Thelight-oriented angle in the ±X direction of the light emitting device100 may be a 110 degrees or more, for example, in a range of 120 degreesto 160 degrees or may be a 140 degrees or more. The light-oriented anglein the ±Z direction of the light emitting device 100 may be 110 degreesor more, for example, in a range of 120 degrees to 160 degrees.

A thickness T1 of the light emitting device 100 may be smaller than thelength of the first and second direction X, for example, may be 3 mm orless, for example, may be 2 mm or less. The length of the seconddirection of the light emitting device 100 may be at least 1.5 times thethickness T1 of the light emitting device 100, but the embodiment is notlimited thereto. The light emitting device 100 may be wider the lightemitting angle of the second direction than the light emitting angle ofthe third direction Z. The light emitting angle of the second directionX of the light emitting device 100 may have in a range of 110 degrees to160 degrees.

The reflective member 110 may be disposed on the substrate 201. Thereflective member 110 may have an area equal to or smaller than an areaof the upper surface of the substrate 201. The reflective member 110 maybe spaced from an edge of the substrate 201. The resin member 150 may bein contact with the upper surface of the edge region of the substrate201. When the resin member 150 is in contact with the upper surface ofthe edge region of the substrate 201, a moisture penetration may besuppressed.

A hole 118 through which a portion of the light emitting device 100 isinserted may be disposed in the reflective member 110. The upper surfaceof the substrate 201 may be exposed to the hole 118 of the reflectivemember 110 and a lower portion of the light emitting device 100 may bebonded to the hole 118 of the reflective member 110. The size of thehole 118 may be equal to or larger than the size of the light emittingdevice 100, but is not limited thereto. The plurality of holes 118 ofthe reflective member 110 may be disposed at a position corresponding toeach of the light emitting devices 100. The reflective member 110 may bein contact with the upper surface of the substrate 201 or may be bondedby the resin member 150, but the invention is not limited thereto.

As shown in FIGS. 7 and 8, the reflective member 110 may have amulti-layer structure having different materials. The reflective member110 includes a reflective layer 111 disposed on the substrate 201, atransmissive layer 112 disposed on the reflective layer 111, and areflective pattern 113 disposed between the reflective layer 111 and thetransmissive layer 112. The reflective member 110 may be a reflectivefilm.

The reflective layer 111 may include a light reflecting material such asa metal or a non-metallic material. In the case of a metal, a metallayer such as Ag may be disposed. In the case of a non-metallicmaterial, the reflective layer 111 may include a plastic material. Thetransmissive layer 112 is a transparent film and may be made of a resinmaterial such as silicone or epoxy or a transparent plastic materialsuch as polyethylene terephthalate (PET), polyvinyl chloride (PVC), andurethane.

As shown in FIGS. 7 and 8, the reflective pattern 113 may be disposedbetween the reflective layer 111 and the transmissive layer 112. Thereflective layer 111 and the transmissive layer 112 may be spaced apartfrom each other by a predetermined gap. An air gap 113B may be formedbetween the reflective layer 111 and the transmissive layer 112. The airgap 113B may be disposed in a region between the reflective patterns113. The air gap 113B or the reflective pattern 113 may be disposed onan outer circumference between the reflective layer 111 and thetransmissive layer 112. The reflective pattern 113 may be adhered to thereflective layer 111 and the transmissive layer 112. As another example,the transmissive layer 112 may be in contact with the reflective layer111 through a region between the reflective patterns 113.

The reflective layer 111 and the reflective pattern 113 reflect lightincident through the transmissive layer 112, and the reflected light maybe extracted through the resin member 150. The reflective pattern 113may be formed to the surface of the reflective layer 111 through whiteprinting or silk screen printing. The reflective pattern 113 may reflectthe incident light. The reflective pattern 113 may improve thebrightness in the entire region by dispersing the incident light. Thereflective pattern 113 may include a metal oxide, for example, amaterial such as TiO₂, CaCO₃, BaSO₄, or Al₂O₃, or may be printed usingan ink including at least one of silicon or polysilicon (PS). Thereflective pattern 113 may be formed of, for example, a material inwhich a metal oxide is added to silicon or epoxy. The pattern density ofthe reflective pattern 113 may gradually increase as a distance from thelight emitting device 100 increases. The unit structure 113A of thereflective pattern 113 may have a polygonal shape, a circular shape, anelliptical shape, a regular or irregular shape, and may be formed in twodimensions or three dimensions. The unit structure 113A of thereflective pattern 113 may have a hexagonal shape having an air gap 113Bformed therein. The reflective patterns 113 may be arranged such thatthe unit structures 113A are densely arranged to each other or an airgap 113C may be disposed in a region where the groups of the reflectivepatterns 113 are spaced from each other. By reflecting the light by thereflective pattern 113 and the reflective layer 111, the number of thelight emitting devices 100 may be reduced and the light uniformity inthe entire region may be improved. Since the reflective member 110 isdisposed on the bottom of the resin member 150, the thickness (T2 inFIG. 1) of the resin member 150 may be reduced. Since the reflectivemember 110 is disposed on the bottom of the resin member 150, thethickness of the resin member 150 may become thinner as a distance fromthe light emitting device is increased.

The resin member 150 may be disposed on the substrate 201. The resinmember 150 may be formed of an insulating material and a transparentmaterial. The resin member 150 may be disposed on an entire uppersurface or a portion of the upper surface of the substrate 201. Theresin members 150 may be disposed on the upper surface of the substrate201, or may be arranged in a plurality of unit sizes. The upper surfacearea of the resin member 150 may be the same as or different from theupper surface area of the substrate 201. The resin member 150 may beformed of a transparent material having a thickness T2 that is thickerthan the thickness T1 of the light emitting device 100. The resin member150 may include a resin material such as silicon or epoxy. The resinmember 150 may include a thermosetting resin material and may optionallyinclude PC, OPS, PMMA, PVC, and the like. The resin member 150 may beformed of glass, but is not limited thereto. For example, a mainmaterial of the resin member 150 may further include a monomer in whichisobornyl acrylate (IBOA), hydroxybutyl acrylate (HBA), and hydroxymetaethyl acrylate (HEMA), which are low boiling point diluent typereactive monomers, are mixed, and as an additive, a photo initiator (forexample, 1-hydroxycyclohexyl phenyl-ketone, Diphenyl),Diphenyl(2,4,6-trimethylbenzoyl phosphine oxide), an antioxidant or thelike may be mixed.

The resin member 150 may include a bead (not shown), and the bead maydiffuse and reflect incident light to increase the amount of light. Thebeads may be arranged in a range of 0.01 to 0.3% of the weight of theresin member 150.

Since the resin member 150 is disposed on the light emitting device 100,the light emitting device 100 may be protected and loss of light emittedfrom the light emitting device 100 may be reduced. The resin member 150may cover the plurality of light emitting devices 100 and may contactthe emitting region 101 of the light emitting device 100. The resinmember 150 may be in contact with the upper surface and side surfaces ofthe light emitting device 100. A portion of the resin member 150 may bedisposed in the hole 118 of the reflective member 110. A portion of theresin member 150 may contact the upper surface of the substrate 201through the hole 118 of the reflective member 110. The portion of theresin member 150 is brought into contact with the substrate 201 toprevent the reflection member 110 disposed between the resin member 150and the substrate 201 from flowing. The holes 118 of the reflectivemember 110 may be further provided with holes other than the regionwhere the light emitting device 100 is disposed in order to fix thereflection member 110, but the invention is not limited thereto.

The thickness T2 of the resin member 150 may be equal to or greater thanthe thickness T1 of the light emitting device 100 or may be 20 mm orless. The thickness T2 of the resin member 150 may range from 2 mm to 20mm, for example. When the thickness T1 of the resin member 150 is largerthan the above range, there is deteriorated the light efficiency. Whenthe thickness T1 of the resin member 150 is lowered than the aboverange, there is lowered a light uniformity. Referring to FIG. 2, thelength Y1 of the resin member 150 in the first direction Y may begreater than the width X1 of the second direction X, and the length Y1in the first direction Y1 may be varied depending on the number of thelight emitting devices 100. The width X1 may be 50 mm or less, forexample, in a range of 10 mm to 30 mm or 15 mm to 23 mm, and if thewidth X1 exceeds the above range, an area deviating from the beamspreading angle is increased and the light uniformity can be lowered.

The surface of the resin member 150 may be coated with a metal materialsuch as aluminum, chromium, and barium sulfate. However, the presentinvention is not limited thereto. Here, the surface of the resin member150 may be a side surface where a light extraction structure 152 is notformed, but the invention is not limited thereto.

The resin member 150 may include a light extraction structure 152 on anupper surface or an exit surface thereof. At least two or more of theside surfaces of the resin member 150 may be arranged in a planeperpendicular or inclined to a bottom surface of the resin member 150.The resin member 150 includes first to fourth side surfaces S11, S12,S13, and S14, wherein the first side surface S11 and the second sidesurface S12 are opposite to each other, and the third side surface S13and the fourth side surface S14 are opposite to each other. The thirdand fourth side surfaces S13 and S14 may be disposed between the firstand second side surfaces S11 and S12 or may be adjacent to the first andsecond side surfaces S11 and S12. A boundary portion between the thirdside surface S13 or the fourth side surface S14 and the first and secondside surfaces S11 and S12 may be angular or curved surface. The firstside surface S11 may face a rear surface of the light emitting device100 and a portion of the second side surface S12 may face the emittingregion 101 of the light emitting device 100.

The light extraction structure 152 may be an optical pattern and maychange a critical angle of incident light. The light extractionstructure 152 may be integrally formed with the resin member 150. Theresin member 150 and the light extraction structure 152 may be formed ofthe same material. Each pattern of the light extraction structure 152may be formed in a prism shape having a gradually narrower width as itgoes up in the third direction Z. The light extraction structure 152 mayinclude a pattern having a wide bottom width and a narrow top width. Thelight extraction structure 152 may include at least one or more of ahemispherical shape, a polygonal shape, or a shape such as a polygonalhorn or a cone.

A side cross-section of the light extraction structure 152 may bearranged in a prismatic pattern having a triangular shape. The patternmay be continuously arranged with a triangular prism shape as shown inFIG. 3, or may be arranged with a predetermined gap B6 in a region 152Abetween the patterns as shown in FIG. 5. As shown in FIG. 4, the pattern154 may have a polygonal cone shape, for example, a pyramid shape or ahemispherical shape. The triangular prism pattern shown in FIG. 3 mayhave a long length in the second direction orthogonal to the thirddirection and may be arranged along the first direction. The seconddirection, which is the length direction of the prism pattern, may be adirection orthogonal to the first direction, which is an arrangementdirection of the light emitting devices.

As shown in FIGS. 1 and 3, when an unit pattern of the light extractionstructure 152 is, for example, a triangular prism pattern, a bottomwidth B2 and a height B1 may be the same or different from each other,the bottom width B2 may be 0.2 mm or more, for example, in the range of0.2 mm to 3 mm. When the bottom width B2 of the pattern is smaller thanthe above range, improvement of the light extraction efficiency isinsignificant. When the bottom width B2 of the pattern is greater thanthe above range, a light uniformity may be degraded. The height B1 ofthe pattern may be 0.2 mm or more, for example, in a range of 0.2 mm to3 mm. When the height B1 of the pattern is smaller than the above range,a pattern formation is difficult and improvement in light extraction isinsignificant, and the thickness T2 of the resin member 150 is increasedwhen the height B1 is greater than the above range. The distance B3between the patterns as the distance between a peak points P0 of thepatterns may be 0.2 mm or more, for example, in the range of 0.2 mm to 3mm. When the distance is smaller than the above range, the improvementof the light efficiency is insignificant, and the light uniformity maybe lowered when the distance is greater than the above range. Here, thedistance B3 between the patterns of the light extraction structure 152or the bottom width B2 of the patterns may be equal to each other.

When the light emitted from the light emitting device 100 or the lightreflected by the reflecting member 110 is incident, the light extractionstructure 152 changes the critical angle of light by a both sidesurfaces or inclined side surfaces of the pattern, and light can beextracted to the outside. The light emitted to the resin member 150 bythe light extraction structure 152 may be a surface light source.

As another example, the distance B3 between the patterns of the lightextraction structure 152 and the bottom width B2 of the pattern maybecome gradually narrower as they are away from the emitting region 101of each light emitting device 100. The light extraction structure 152may be disposed in a region overlapping the light emitting device 100 ina vertical direction. Accordingly, the resin member 150 may improve theuniformity of the light by the light extraction structure 152 in theentire region by arranging differently the distance B3 or the bottomwidth B2 of the pattern according to the incident light amount of theincident light, and a surface light source may be provided.

Referring to FIG. 5, when the patterns of the light extraction structure152 are spaced from each other, the region 152A between the patterns maybe spaced apart by 0.01 mm or more, for example, in a range of 0.01 mmto 3 mm. The width B6 of the region 152A between the patterns may beequal to or smaller than the bottom width B2 of the pattern. The region152A between these patterns may be a horizontal surface or a slopedsurface or a concave surface.

Referring to FIG. 6, a high point P0 of patterns in the light extractionstructure 152 may have a convex surface. The light extraction structure152 may have a concave surface having a low point P1 between thepatterns. Since the high peak P0 and the low point P1 of the patternsare arranged in a curved surface, the incident light can be reflected ortransmitted. Since the high peak P0 and the low point P1 of the patternsare arranged on the curved surface, the light loss and the damage of thepattern due to the deformed shape during an injection molding may beprevented. The height, the bottom width and the distance of thesepatterns will be described with reference to FIGS. 2 and 3.

Second Embodiment

FIG. 9 is a side cross-sectional view of a lighting module according toa second embodiment, and FIG. 10 is a partially enlarged view of a lightextraction structure of FIG. 9. In describing the second embodiment, thesame configuration as that disclosed above is referred to thedescription disclosed above, and may be selectively applied thereto.

Referring to FIGS. 9 and 10, a lighting module 200A includes a substrate201, a plurality of light emitting devices 100, a reflective member 110,and a resin member 160.

A first side surface S11 of the resin member 160 may be spaced apartfrom a rear surface of each of the light emitting devices 100. At leasta portion of a second side surface S12 of the resin member 160 maycorrespond to an emitting region 101 of the light emitting device 100.

The resin member 160 may have a light extraction structure 162. Theresin member 160 may include a plurality of light emitting cells 160A.Each of the light emitting cells 160A includes a first region C2 havinga horizontal upper surface and a second region C3 inclined. The lightemitting cells 160A of the resin member 160 may be disposed on each ofthe light emitting devices 100, respectively. The light emitting cell160A is a region in which light is emitted from each of the lightemitting devices 100, and may be a unit region having an individuallight emitting device 100. The resin member of an adjacent lightemitting cell 160A may be connected to each other. The light emittingdevices 100 disposed at each of the light emitting cells 160A may emitthe same color to each other. The plurality of light emitting devices100 may emit light of a single color in one direction.

The first region C2 of the light emitting cell 160A may overlap with thelight emitting device 100 in a vertical direction. A width of the firstregion C2 may be equal to or 1.5 times or more a width H1 of the lightemitting device 100. The first region C2 may be located above the rearsurface of the light emitting device 100 to protect the rear surface ofthe light emitting device 100. The second region C3 may extend in adirection of the second side surface S12 from the emitting region 101 ofthe light emitting device 100. A thickness of the second region C3 maybecome gradually thinner as it is farther from the light emitting device100. A height of an upper surface of the second region C3 may have agradually lower height as it is father from the light emitting device100. Such a thickness of the second region C3 is gradually narrower asit is farther from the light emitting device 100, thereby improvinguniformity of light extracted through the second region C3. Luminousintensity or distribution of light extracted through an upper surface oran exit surface of the resin member 160 may be uniform by disposing thelight extraction structure 162 on the first and second regions C2 andC3.

The first region C2 may be disposed at 50% or less of a width C1 or aperiod of the light emitting cell 160A, for example, in a range of 5% to30%. The first region C2 may be disposed in a range of 1/9 to 1/7 of thesecond region C3. The pattern of the light extraction structure 162disposed on the first region C2 may have the same distance and the samebottom width. The second region C3 may be an inclined region withrespect to an upper surface of the substrate 201 or an upper surface ofthe reflective member 110. The light extraction structure 162 on thesecond region C3 may have the same shaped pattern or the same distancebetween the patterns as being adjacent to the substrate 201 or thereflective member 110.

As shown in FIG. 10, the light extraction structure 162 may include apattern having a polygonal shape or a curved surface as disclosed in anembodiment. When a unit pattern of the light extraction structure 162is, for example, a triangular prism pattern, a bottom width B2 and aheight B1 may be the same as or different from each other, and thebottom width B2 of the pattern may be 0.2 mm or more, for example, in arange of 0.2 mm to 3 mm. When the bottom width B2 of the pattern issmaller than the range, an improvement of light extraction efficiency isinsignificant, and when it is larger than the range, light uniformitymay be lowered. The height B1 of the pattern may be 0.2 mm or more, forexample, in a range of 0.2 mm to 3 mm, and when the height B1 of thepattern is smaller than the range, it is difficult to form a pattern andan improvement of light extraction is insignificant, and when it islarger than the range, a thickness of the resin member 160 is increased.A distance B3 between the patterns is a distance between high points P0of the pattern, which may be 0.2 mm or more, for example, in a range of0.2 mm to 3 mm, and when the distance B3 is smaller than the range, animprovement of luminous efficiency is insignificant, and when it islarger than the range, light uniformity may be lowered.

Both side surfaces inclined in a unit pattern of the light extractionstructure 162 include first and second surfaces S1 and S2, and the firstsurface S1 may be a surface more adjacent to a vertical straight line Z1than the second surface S2. When an angle R6 of the second surface S2 ofthe patterns is equal to each other, an inclination angle R3 of thefirst surface S1 may be gradually smaller. As the light extractionstructure 162 of the second region C3 is adjacent to the substrate 201or the reflective member 110, an internal angle R1 of the pattern may begradually smaller. The angle R3 with respect to the first surface S1 onthe basis of the vertical straight line Z1 may be equal to or smallerthan an angle R4 with respect to the second surface S2.

The internal angle R1 of the pattern in the light extraction structure162 may be gradually narrower as it is adjacent to the substrate 201 orthe reflective member 110, and for example, may be smaller in proportionto a distance from the light emitting device 100. When the angle R6 ofthe second surface S2 of the pattern is the same angle to each other,the angle R3 of the first surface S1 may be changed according to thedistance. The angle R3 of the first surface S1 is 60 degrees or less,for example, in a range of 50 degrees to 60 degrees when a startingpoint of an inclination is distance 0, and may be decreased by 1 degreeor more every time the distance increases by 1 mm. The angle R3 includesθ1−(α×β), the θ1 is an angle when the distance is 0, and has a range of50 to 60 degrees, and the distance a is a distance from 0 to C3, and theweight β may be in a range of 1 to 1.1 or less. For example, in a rangeof 1.06 to 1.09, as a weight of an increased angle per 1 mm. Forexample, when a value of the weight β is 1.08 and the angle R3 at thepoint 0 is 55 degrees, R3 at the position moved to the point of 10 mmmay be obtained as 55−(10×1.08)=44.92.

An inclination angle R6 of the second surface S2 of the pattern in thelight extraction structure, which is an angle with respect to ahorizontal straight line LS2 connecting low points of the patterns, maybe smaller than R3. The angle R6 may be disposed at 1 degree or more,for example, in a range of 1 degree to 50 degrees, or 30 degrees to 50degrees, as inclination angle of the second region C3. Here, the secondsurface S2 is disposed at an angle of 50 to 70 degrees with respect to ahorizontal straight line LS1, and may provide the second region C3 withan inclined structure. The condition of R2>R6 may be satisfied.

A thickness T2 of the first region C2 in the resin member 160 may be ina range of 2 mm to 50 mm, for example, 2 mm to 10 mm. The thickness ofthe second region C3 may be smaller than the thickness T2 of the firstregion C2. A minimum thickness T3 of the resin member 160 or the secondregion C3 may be equal to or less than a thickness T1 of the lightemitting device 100. The upper surface of the resin member 160 or a lowpoint P4 of the second region C3 may be disposed on the same line as, orlower than, an optical axis Y0 of the light emitting device 100. Theminimum thickness T3 of the resin member 160 may be disposed at 0.5 mmor more from the upper surface of the reflective member 110, forexample, in a range of 0.5 mm to 5 mm, and when it is thinner than theabove range, the connected portion may be weakened, and when it isthicker than the above range, optical interference may be given toanother light emitting cell 160A.

In the resin member 160, a boundary region C4 between the light emittingcells 160A may be disposed on a rear surface of the light emittingdevice 100. An outer side surface 161 between the light emitting cells160A may be a vertical surface or an inclined surface, and may connectadjacent the light emitting cells 160A to each other.

Third Embodiment

FIG. 11 is a is a perspective view of a lighting module according to thethird embodiment, FIG. 12 is a partially enlarged view of the lightingmodule of FIG. 11, FIG. 13 is a view illustrating the light extractionstructure of the resin member of FIG. 12, FIG. 14 is a plan view of thelighting module of FIG. 12. In describing the third embodiment, the sameconfiguration as the above-described configuration is referred to theabove description, and may be selectively applied to the presentembodiment.

Referring to FIGS. 11 to 14, a lighting module 200B includes a substrate201, a light emitting device 100, a resin member 170 and the reflectivemembers 110. A light emitting cells 170A of the resin member 170 may berespectively disposed on each light emitting device 100. The lightemitting cell 170A is a region for emitting light emitted from each ofthe light emitting devices 100 and may be a unit region having eachlight emitting device 100. The light emitting cells 170A may emits thesame color from each other by a light emitting device 100. The pluralityof light emitting devices 100 may emit light of a single color in onedirection.

As shown FIGS. 11, 12 and 16, the resin member 170 includes a slopedregion, and the sloped region may be formed in an entire region of theupper surface of the resin member 170. The maximum thickness T2 of theresin member 170 may be 50 mm or less, for example, in a range of 2 mmto 10 mm.

The region having the maximum thickness T2 in the resin member 170 mayextend further outward than the rear surface of the light emittingdevice 100, for example, in a rear direction, to protect the rearsurface of the light emitting device 100. The region having the minimumthickness T3 in the resin members 170 may be a region adjacent to otherlight emitting device 100. The minimum thickness T3 of the resin member170 may be equal to or less than the thickness of the light emittingdevice 100. The low point P4 on the upper surface of the resin member170 may be disposed on the same line or lower than the optical axis Y0of the light emitting device 100. The minimum thickness T3 of the resinmember 170 may be 0.5 mm or more, for example, in a range of 0.5 mm to 5mm from the upper surface of the reflective member 110, and when thethickness is thinner than the above range, a problem may arise in aportion connected, and when the thickness is thicker than the aboverange, it may cause optical interference to other light emitting cells.

In the resin member 170, the side surfaces S11, S12, S13, and S14 exceptfor the upper surface may be a sloped surface or a vertical surface. Thelight extraction structure 172 may not extend to the third and fourthside surfaces S13 and S14. The side surfaces S11, S12, S13, and S14 ofthe resin member 170 can prevent light from leaking. The side surfaceS111 disposed in a boundary region between the light emitting cells 170Aof the resin member 170 may be a vertical surface or a sloped surface.

The pattern of the light extraction structure 172 may be disposed alongan inclined region with respect to the upper surface of the substrate201 or the upper surface of the reflective member 110. The patterns ofthe light extraction structure 172 may have the same shape, or adistance between the patterns may be the same or different as thesubstrate 201 or the reflective member 110 is adjacent to each other.

The light extraction structure 172 of the resin member 170 will bedescribed with reference to the description of the patterns disclosed inthe embodiment. As shown in FIG. 13, when the unit pattern of the lightextraction structure 172 is, for example, a triangular prism pattern,the bottom width B2 and the height B1 may be the same or different, andthe bottom width B2 of the pattern may be 0.2 mm or more, for example,in a range of 0.2 mm to 3 mm. When the bottom width B2 of the pattern issmaller than the above range, the improvement of the light extractionefficiency is insignificant. When the bottom width B2 is larger than theabove range, the light uniformity may be lowered. The height B1 of thepattern may be 0.2 mm or more, for example, in a range of 0.2 mm to 3mm. When the height B1 of the pattern is smaller than the above range, apattern formation is difficult and improvement in light extraction isinsignificant. When the height B1 of the pattern is greater than theabove range, there is a problem that the thickness of the resin member170 is increased. The distance B3 between the patterns as the distancebetween the high points of the pattern may be 0.2 mm or more, forexample, in the range of 0.2 mm to 3 mm. When the distance is smallerthan the above range, the improvement of the light efficiency isinsignificant. When the distance is greater than the above range, thelight uniformity may be lowered.

An internal angle R1 of the pattern may gradually become narrower as thelight extraction structure 172 is adjacent to the substrate 201 or thereflecting member 110. For example, when an angle R6 of the secondsurface S1 of the pattern is the same, an inclination angle R3 of thefirst surface S1 can be gradually reduced. Accordingly, the internalangle R1 of the pattern may be gradually reduced toward the substrate201 or the reflective member 110, for example, may be reduced inproportion to the distance to the light emitting device 100. The angleR6 of the second surface S2 of the pattern is the same angle and theangle R3 of the first surface S1 may be changed according to thedistance. When the inclination starting point is distance 0, the angleR3 of the first surface S1 is 60 degrees or less, for example, in therange of 50 degrees to 60 degrees, and may be decreased by 1 degree ormore every time the distance is increased by 1 mm. The R3 includesθ1−(α×β), the angle θ1 is an angle when the distance is 0 and has arange of 50 degrees to 60 degrees, the distance a is a section fromdistance 0 to C3, and the weight β is a weight of an angel increased by1 mm, and may be in the range of more than 1 and 1.1 or less, forexample, in a range of 1.06 to 1.09. For example, when a value of theweight β is 1.08 and the angle R3 is 55 degrees at the low point 0, theangle R3 at the position shifted 10 mm from the low point may beobtained as 55−(10×1.08)=44.92. In this case, when the starting angle,that is, the angle at the position where the distance is zero islowered, the inclination angle of the entire upper surface is lowered,or the maximum thickness of the resin member 170 is lower than thesecond embodiment, the angel R3 may be changed.

In FIG. 13, an inclination angle R6 of the second surface S2 of thepattern in the light extraction structure 172 is an angle with respectto a horizontal straight line LS2 connecting the low points of thepatterns, and may be smaller than the angle R3. An angle R5 may be aninclination angle of the upper surface of the resin member 170 and maybe 1 degree or more, for example, in a range of 1 degree to 10 degrees,or 6 degrees to 10 degrees.

The pattern of the light extraction structure 172 of the resin member170 may include at least one of the high point and the low point as anangular surface or a curved surface. For example, the pattern may beselected from the shapes shown in FIGS. 3, 4 and 6. As another example,the pattern of the light extraction structure 172 may be such that theregions between the patterns are spaced apart from each other withoutcontacting each other, as shown in FIG. 5, and the spaced regions may besloped or curved. Alternatively, the patterns of the light extractionstructure 172A of FIG. 15 may be disposed along a sloped region with atleast one or both of the high point P0 and the low point P1 having acurved surface. Here, the widths E3 and E4 of the both sides from thehigh point P0 can satisfy the condition of E4>E3 as the distance fromthe emitting region 101 of the light emitting device becomes larger. Thecondition of E4>E3 can be applied to the pattern of FIG. 13, and thedistance E4 may be gradually increased as the distance from the lightemitting device is larger than the distance E3.

The high point of the pattern of the light extraction structure 172according to the embodiment may have a gradually lower height as thedistance from the emitting region 101 of the light emitting device 100is increased. The distance between the light emitting devices 100disposed within the resin member 170 may be 100 mm or less, for example,in a range of 5 mm to 100 mm, and when the light emitting device 100 issmaller than the range, an interference may occur, and when it is largerthan the above range, it is difficult to secure an amount of light andlight uniformity.

As shown in FIG. 16, the resin member 170 has the light extractionstructure 172 on the substrate 201 or the reflective member 110 and isarranged to have a thickness that gradually becomes thinner away fromthe light emitting device 100, so that the light emitted from thereflective member 110 or the light emitting device 100 can be emitted inthe upward direction. The light extraction structure 172 is disposedcloser to the optical axis as the light extraction structure 172 isfarther from the light emitting device 100, thereby reducing adifference in amount of light incident on the light extraction structure172. The uniformity of the light extracted through the light extractionstructure 172 can be improved. Such the light uniformity may have auniform light uniformity of the surface light source over a certainwidth, and for example, the light distribution of the direction of theoptical axis, +30 degrees (Left) or −30 degrees (Right) with respect tothe optical axis on the plane of the illumination module may be uniform.

FIG. 16 is an example of a side sectional view of the lighting module ofFIG. 11, and FIGS. 17 and 18 are first and second modified examples ofthe lighting module of FIG. 16.

As shown in FIG. 16, the light extraction structure 172 of the resinmember 170 is disposed at a low point lower than the optical axis of thelight emitting device 100, and is spaced apart from the reflectivemember 110. The minimum thickness T3 of the resin member 170 is smallerthan the thickness T1 of the light emitting device 100. In this case,light leaks through the thinnest region of the resin member 170 and maybe suppressed from proceeding through other emitting region.

As shown in FIG. 17, a low portion on an upper surface of the resinmember 170 may be contacted with the reflection member 110. The lowpoint of the upper surface of the resin member 170 contacts thereflective member 110, thereby reducing optical interference between thelight emitting cells. Here, the low point P4 of the upper surface of theresin member 170 may be formed to be long in the width of the seconddirection X as shown in FIG. 14, or may be formed only in the centerregion. The resin member 170 is disposed on the inclined side surfaceS111 between an adjacent light emitting cells 170A so that the injectionmolding may be easily separated.

As shown in FIG. 18, the resin member 170 may be connected to the lightextraction structure 172 with a concave low point P4 having a curvedsurface connected to the side surface S111 between the adjacent lightemitting cells 170A, and may be connected to the extraction structure172 with a high point having a convex surface. This resin member 170 canbe easily separated during injection molding, and light traveling in thelight direction may be effectively blocked by the low point P4 of theconcave curved surface to prevent light interference from beinggenerated in other emitting regions.

FIG. 19 is a perspective view showing a third modification of thelighting module of FIG. 11, and FIG. 20 is a partial side sectional viewof the lighting module of FIG. 19.

Referring to FIGS. 19 and 20, a lighting module includes a substrate201, a plurality of light emitting devices 100, a reflective member 110on the substrate 201, and a resin member 180 having a light extractionstructure 182 on the substrate 201 and the light emitting device 100.

The light emitting device 100 may be arranged along the second directionY of the substrate 201. The light emitting device 100 may be arrangedalong at least one of the edges of the substrate 201, for example, maybe arranged along a longitudinal edge of the substrate 201.

The light emitting device 100 may be arranged along the thickest regionof the regions of the resin member 180. The thickness of the resinmember 180 may be thicker in the region where the light emitting device100 is disposed and may become thinner as the distance from the lightemitting device 100 increases. The patterns of the light extractionstructures 182 of the resin member 180 may be alternately arranged inthe first direction and arranged in the long longitudinal direction inthe second direction orthogonal to the first direction. The length ofeach pattern may be the same as the length Y2 of the resin member 180.The longitudinal direction of a prism pattern may be the same directionas the arrangement direction of the light emitting devices. The prismpatterns may be arranged in a direction orthogonal to an arrangementdirection of the light emitting devices.

The length X2 of the resin member 180 in the first direction may besmaller than the length Y2 in the second direction, for example, ½ orless. A distance B5 between the light emitting devices 100 may be 100 mmor less, for example, in a range of 1 mm to 30 mm or 15 mm to 25 mm.When the distance B5 between the light emitting devices 100 is smallerthan the above range, the number of the light emitting devices 100 canbe increased. When the distance B5 between the light emitting devices100 is greater than the above range, a dark region may be generated.

As another example, the light emitting device 100 may be disposed on thesubstrate 201 in a zigzag. The thickness of the resin member 180 may bethicker in the region where the light emitting device 100 is disposedand may become thinner as the distance from the light emitting device100 increases. Each of the light emitting regions of the resin member170 is disposed on each of the light emitting devices 100 and may bearranged in a width of 100 mm or less, for example, in a range of 1 mmto 30 mm or 15 mm to 25 mm, respectively. Although the thickness of theresin member 180 according to the embodiment has been described as beinggradually thinned, it may optionally include the structure of the resinmember of the first or second embodiment.

FIG. 21 is a view showing another arrangement example of the lightemitting device in the lighting module according to the embodiment.

Referring to FIG. 21, when the resin member 190 has a polygonal lightemitting cell, the light emitting device 100 may be disposed within anedge region of the resin member 190. The light extraction structure 192of the resin member 190 may be arranged in a direction in which patternsare orthogonal to the optical axis direction of the light emittingdevice 100. The detailed construction of such a pattern will bedescribed with reference to the description of the embodiments disclosedabove. The resin member disclosed in the embodiment may be a straightbar having a predetermined width, a curved bar having a predeterminedcurvature, a bar having at least one bent, or two or more of thestraight, curved, or may be in a mixed form. Such a shape may varydepending on the type and structure of a vehicle lamp such as anapplication such as a head lamp, a side marker lamp, a side mirror lamp,a fog lamp, a tail lamp, a stop lamp, a daytime running lamp. Or it maybe applied to a display device, a lighting device such as a vehicleinterior lighting, a vehicle outer lamp.

FIGS. 22 and 23 show a lighting device with a lighting module accordingto an embodiment. The lighting module in the lighting device accordingto the embodiment can selectively apply the first to third lightingmodules, and the description will be made with reference to the abovedescription. The lighting module 200B includes a module disclosed in theembodiment (s), for example, includes a substrate 201, a plurality oflight emitting devices 100 on the substrate 201, a resin member 170 andreflective member 110.

An optical member 230 may be disposed on the lighting module 200B, andthe optical member 230 may diffuse and transmit incident light. Theoptical member 230 uniformly diffuses and emits the surface light sourceemitted through the resin member 170. The optical member 230 may includean optical lens or an inner lens, and the optical lens may condense thelight toward the target or change the path of the light. The opticalmember 230 may include a plurality of lens portions 231 on at least oneof the upper surface and the lower surface of the optical member 230,and the lens portions 231 may have a shape protruding downward from theoptical member 230 or may have a shape protruding upward from theoptical member 230. Such an optical member 230 may control the lightdistribution characteristics of the lighting device.

The optical member 230 may include a material having a refractive indexof 2.0 or less, for example, 1.7 or less. The material of the opticalmember 230 may be formed of a transparent resin material of acrylic,polymethyl methacrylate (PMMA), polycarbonate (PC), epoxy resin (EP), ortransparent glass.

The optical member 230 may be spaced from the lighting module 200B, forexample, the substrate 201 by 10 mm or more, for example, in a range of15 mm to 100 mm. when the distance is out of the above range, a lightintensity may be lowered and when the distance is smaller than the aboverange, the uniformity of light may be lowered.

The lighting module 200 may include a heat dissipation plate (not shown)at a bottom surface thereof. The heat dissipation plate may include aplurality of heat dissipation fins and may dissipate heat conducted tothe substrate 201. The heat dissipation plate may include at least oneof metals such as aluminum, copper, magnesium, nickel, or an alloythereof.

The lighting device includes a housing 300 having a receiving space 305,a lighting module according to an embodiment disposed at the bottom ofthe receiving space of the housing 300, and an optical member 230disposed on the lighting module. An outer surface of the receiving space305 of the housing 300 may be provided at an inclined surface withrespect to the bottom surface of the housing 300 and the inclinedsurface may improve the light extraction efficiency. The surface of thereceiving space 305 of the housing 300 may be formed with a metallicmaterial of reflective material and the light extraction efficiency inthe receiving space 305 may be improved by such metallic material. Thedepth of the receiving space 305 is larger than the high point of theresin member 170 and may emit light emitted through the resin member170.

The housing 300 includes a bottom portion 301 and a reflective portion302. The bottom portion 301 is disposed under the substrate 201. Thereflective portion 302 may protrude upward from an outer periphery ofthe bottom portion 301 and may be disposed around the resin member 170.The housing 300 may include a metal or a plastic material, but theinvention is not limited thereto.

A hole (not shown) through which a cable connected to the substrate 201passes may be formed in the bottom portion 301 or the reflective portion302 of the housing 300, but the invention is not limited thereto. Thesubstrate 201 is bonded to the bottom portion 301 of the housing 300with a fastening means such as a screw or a bonding member or ahook-like structure. Accordingly, the substrate 201 may be fixed to thebottom of the housing 300. The lighting device according to theembodiment may be applied to various vehicle lighting devices such as ahead lamp, a side marker lamp, a side mirror lamp, a fog lamp, a taillamp, a stop lamp, a daytime running lamp, and a display device or atraffic lamps.

Fourth Embodiment

FIG. 24 is a plan view illustrating a lighting module according to afourth embodiment, and FIG. 25 is a side cross-sectional view of thelighting module of FIG. 24.

Referring to FIGS. 24 and 25, a lighting module 400 according to anembodiment may include a substrate 401, a light emitting device 100disposed on the substrate 401, and a resin member 450 covering thesubstrate 401 and the light emitting device 100 and emitting light. Thelighting module 400 may include a reflective member 410 disposed on thesubstrate 401. The lighting module 400 may emit light emitted from thelight emitting device 100 as a surface light source. The lighting module400 may be defined as a light emitting cell or a light source module.One lighting module 400 may be disposed on the substrate 401, or aplurality of the lighting modules 400 may be arranged in a firstdirection as shown in FIG. 26. The substrate 401 is referred to thedescription of embodiment(s) disclosed above, and may be selectivelyapplied to the present embodiment.

The light emitting device 100 and the resin member 450 are disposed onthe substrate 401 and the light emitting device 100 is disposed on oneside of the resin member 450 to emit light in the Y direction. The lightemitting device 100 may have an emitting region 101 through which lightis exited, and the emitting region 101, for example, may be verticallydisposed in the Z direction with respect to the Y-axis horizontal to thesubstrate 401. The emitting region 101 may be disposed in an X-axis andZ-axis plane. The description of the light emitting device 100 isreferred to the description of embodiment(s) disclosed above, and may beselectively applied to the present embodiment. The resin member 450 mayemit light of the same color to each other by the light emitting device100. The plurality of light emitting devices 100 may emit light of asingle color.

The lighting module 400 may include a reflective member 410. Thereflective member 410 may be disposed between the substrate 401 and theresin member 450. The reflective member 410 may be provided in the formof a reflective member having a metallic material or a non-metallicmaterial. The reflective member 410 may be disposed on the substrate401. The description of the reflective member 410 is referred to thedescription of embodiment(s) disclosed above, and may be selectivelyapplied to the present embodiment.

The reflective member 410 may be formed to have a thickness thinner thana thickness T1 of the light emitting device 100. The thickness of thereflective member 410 may include a range of 0.2 mm±0.02 mm. A lowerportion of the light emitting device 100 may be passed through anopening 418 of such a reflective member 410 and an upper portion of thelight emitting device 100 may be protruded. A straight line or anoptical axis Y0 extending from the emitting region 101 of the lightemitting device 100 may be orthogonal to a center of the emitting region101 and may be disposed above an upper surface of the reflective member410. The material of the reflective member 410 may be described withreference to the above description and selectively applied to thepresent embodiment. The reflective member 410 according to an embodimentmay reflect incident light, and thus an amount of light may be increasedso that light may be emitted in a uniform distribution.

The resin member 450 may be disposed on the substrate 401. The materialand the detailed configuration of the resin member 450 is referred tothe description of embodiment(s) disclosed above, and may be selectivelyapplied to the present embodiment. Since the resin member 450 isdisposed on the light emitting device 100, the light emitting device 100may be protected and loss of light emitted from the light emittingdevice 100 may be reduced. The resin member 450 may cover the lightemitting device 100 and may be in contact with the emitting region 101of the light emitting device 100. A thickness of the resin member 450may vary depending on a region. A thickness T2 of the thickest region(e.g., Px) in the Z direction in the resin member 450 may be thickerthan the thickness T1 of the light emitting device 100 and a thicknessT3 of the thinnest region (e.g., P4) may be thinner than the thicknessT1 of the light emitting device 100. A high point Px which is highest inthe resin member 450 may be disposed to be closer to the light emittingdevice 100 than a center of the resin member 450 in the Y direction. Themaximum thickness T2 of the resin member 450 may be greater than orequal to the thickness T1 of the light emitting device 100 and may beless than or equal to 20 mm. The maximum thickness T2 of the resinmember 450 may be, for example, in a range of 2 mm to 20 mm. When themaximum thickness T2 of the resin member 450 is larger than the aboverange, light efficiency may decrease or a size of module may increase,and when the maximum thickness T2 is smaller than the above range, lightuniformity may be deteriorated. The resin member 450 may be a unit lightemitting cell 450A or a light emitting region of a unit lighting module.The resin member 450 may have a length K1 in the Y direction equal to orgreater than a length K2 in the X direction. The length K1 in the Ydirection may be the length of first and second side surfaces S11 andS12 disposed on opposite sides of the resin member 450 in the Xdirection. The length K1 in the Y direction may have a range of 10 mm ormore, for example, 10 mm to 40 mm, or 20±5 mm. The length K2 in the Xdirection may be in a range of 10 mm or more, for example, 10 mm to 30mm or 15 mm to 23 mm. A size of the resin member 450 may be provided inconsideration of the light uniformity, and may vary depending onapplications.

The thinnest region of the resin member 450 may be the farthest regionbased on the emitting region 101 of the light emitting device 100. Theminimum thickness T3 of the resin member 450 may be 1 mm or more basedon an upper surface of the substrate 401 or less than the thickness ofthe light emitting device 100. A low point P4 of an upper surface of theresin member 450 may be lower than a height of an upper surface of thelight emitting device 100. The low point P4 which is lowest in the uppersurface of the resin member 450 may have a thickness of 0.5 mm or more,for example, in a range of 0.5 mm to 5 mm from the upper surface of thereflective member 410 or the substrate 401. When the thickness isthinner than the above range, light extraction may be deteriorated, andwhen it is thicker than the above range, optical interference to otherlight emitting cells 450A may be caused. The low point P4 of the uppersurface of the resin member 450 may be equal to or higher than a heightof the straight line extending from the center of the emitting region101 of the light emitting device 100, or the optical axis Y0. A sidesurface of the resin member 450 may be coated with a metal material suchas aluminum, chromium, or barium sulfate, but is not limited thereto.

The upper surface of the resin member 450 includes an exit portion 440and a reflective portion 442. The exit portion 440 may include a lightextraction structure. The light extraction structure may change acritical angle of incident light as an optical pattern. The lightextraction structure may be formed integrally with the resin member 450.The resin member 450 and the light extraction structure may be formed ofthe same material. The light extraction structure may have a patternhaving a predetermined distance or irregular distance. The lightextraction structure may have a distance of pattern gradually narrowedas it is farther from the light emitting device 100. The above-describedpatterns, for example, the patterns shown in FIGS. 10, 13, and 15 may beselectively applied to the light extraction structure.

A distance from the upper surface of the substrate 401 may be graduallyreduced as the exit portion 440 of the resin member 450 is farther fromthe light emitting device 100. The distance of the pattern of the exitportion 440 may be uniform or gradually narrowed as the region isadjacent to the substrate 401. The exit portion 440 may have the lightextraction structure and may be disposed to have a thickness thatgradually decreases as the exit portion 440 is farther from the lightemitting device 100. Accordingly, the exit portion 440 may emit thelight reflected by the reflective member 410 or the light emitted fromthe light emitting device 100 in the Z direction. The exit portion 440is disposed to be adjacent to the substrate 401 as it is farther fromthe light emitting device 100, and thus a difference in amount of lightaccording to a distance from the emitting region 101 of the lightemitting device 100 may be reduced. Accordingly, the uniformity of thelight extracted via the exit portion 440 may be improved. When the lightemitted from the light emitting device 100 or the light reflected by thereflective member 410 is incident, the light extraction structure of thelight exit portion 440 may change a critical angle of light by thepatterns of the light exit portion 440 to extract the light to anoutside. The light emitted in the Z direction via such an exit portion440 may be a surface light source. The light extraction structure of theexit portion 440 is referred to the description of embodiment(s)disclosed above, and may be selectively applied to the presentembodiment.

The reflective portion 442 in the upper surface of the resin member 450may be disposed on a region adjacent to the light emitting device 100.The reflective portion 442 may be disposed to be closer to the lightemitting device 100 than the light extraction structure. The reflectiveportion 442 may include a region between the light emitting device 100and the exit portion 440. The reflective portion 442 may include aconvex curved surface. The reflective portion 442 may include a curvedsurface including an aspherical shape or having a plurality ofinflection points. The reflective portion 442 may reflect lighttraveling in an upward direction from the light emitting device 100 in adifferent direction. The light reflected by the reflective portion 442may be extracted via the exit portion 440 or reflected on the reflectivemember 410. Such a reflective portion 442 may prevent hot spots frombeing generated in a region adjacent to the light emitting device 100.

The reflective portion 442 may have a gradually lower height as it isadjacent to the light emitting device 100. A surface of the reflectiveportion 442 may have a height gradually higher as it is farther from thelight emitting device 100 and may be connected to the high point Px ofthe resin member 450 and the light extraction structure of the exitportion 440. The reflective portion 442 may have a structure of aplurality of steps or may be formed as a curved surface having aplurality of inflection points.

The reflective portion 442 may cover up to a distance K0 of 0.1 mm ormore, for example, a distance K0 of 0.1 mm to 10 mm, or a distance K0 of1 mm to 3 mm based on a straight line Z1 in the Z direction or astraight line Z1 perpendicular to the upper surface of the substrate 401from the emitting region 101 of the light emitting device 100. A radiusof curvature of the curved surface of the reflective portion 442 mayhave 3 mm or more, for example, in a range of 4 mm to 5.5 mm. A boundarypoint between the reflective portion 442 and the exit portion 440 may bethe high point Px of the resin member 450 and may be 45 degrees or more,for example, in a range of 45 to 80 degrees based on the Y-axis. Thehigh point Px of the resin member 450 may be the same as or differentfrom a high point of the reflective portion 442. A high point of theexit portion 440 may be the same as or different from the high point ofthe reflective portion 442. The distance K0 of such a reflective portion442 and the curvature of the curved surface may vary depending on aposition of the light emitting device 100 and beam spread anglecharacteristics of the light.

A region of the reflective portion 442 may extend to a partial region ofa protrusion portion 430. The region of the reflective portion 442 mayfurther include a region to −10 degrees in the −Y direction based on thestraight line Z1 in the Z direction from the emitting region 101 of thelight emitting device 100. Here, the region corresponding to thenegative (−) angle may be a region on the light emitting device 100. Aheight of a low point of the reflective portion 442 may be disposed at aposition higher than the upper surface of the light emitting device 100.A height of the high point of the reflective portion 442 may be disposedat a position higher than the upper surface of the light emitting device100 from the substrate 401. The height of the high point of thereflective portion 442 may be, for example, 1.5 mm or more, for example,in a range of 2 to 10 mm, or in a range of 2 to 4 mm. The region of thereflective portion 442 according to an embodiment may be disposed on aregion deviating from a beam spread angle of the light emitting device100 so as to solve a problem of hot spots due to the light deviatingfrom the beam spread angle of the light of the light emitting device100.

The resin member 450 may include a protrusion portion 430. Theprotrusion portion 430 is disposed on a region of the light emittingdevice 100 and encloses the light emitting device 100. The protrusionportion 430 may protrude in a rear direction from the resin member 450or may protrude in a recessed direction of another resin member as shownin FIG. 26. Here, the rear direction may be a direction opposite to thedirection in which the light is exited. The surface of the protrusionportion 430 may be spaced apart from the surface of the light emittingdevice 100 to protect the light emitting device 100.

The first side surface S11 of the resin member 450 may include a firstconcave region S131 and a second concave region S141 at an outer side ofthe protrusion portion 430. The protrusion portion 430 may be disposedbetween the first concave region S131 and the second concave regionS141. The first and second concave regions S131 and S141 may be regionsthat are not overlapped with the light emitting device 100 in the firstdirection. The first concave region S131 may be disposed between theprotrusion portion 430 and a third side surface S13 and the secondconcave region S141 may be disposed between the protrusion portion 430and a fourth side surface S14.

A width K6 of the protrusion portion 430 in a second direction may begreater than the width of the light emitting device 100 and may begreater than a width K4 of the first concave region S131. The width K6of the protrusion portion 430 may be 30% or more, for example, in arange of 35% to 70% of a width K2 of the resin member 450. The width K6of the protrusion portion 430 may be twice or less the width of thelight emitting device 100. When the width K6 of the protrusion portion430 is larger than the above range, dark portions at the boundaryportion may be generated. When the width K6 is less than the aboverange, a size of the light emitting device 100 may be reduced.

A distance between the surface of the protrusion portion 430 and thelight emitting device 100 may be in a range of 0.2 mm or more, forexample, 0.3 to 1 mm. When the distance is smaller than the above range,a protection effect may be deteriorated, and when the distance is largerthan the above range, dark portions may be generated. An upper surface444 of the protrusion portion 430 may be formed as a rough surface, andthe rough surface may reflect light incident from another direction. Therough surface may include a concave-convex shape, but is not limitedthereto. The rough upper surface of the protrusion portion 430 may havea pattern size smaller than that of the exit portion 440. Accordingly,the rough surface of the protrusion portion 430 may reflect lightincident from the rear direction.

A thickness T5 of the protrusion portion 430 may be greater than thethickness T1 of the light emitting device 100. The protrusion portion430 may have a thickness thinner than the maximum thickness T2 of theresin member 450 and the protrusion portion 430 may protrude in the reardirection from a part of a center region of the resin member 450 whenviewed from the top. The width K6 of the protrusion portion 430 in the Xdirection may be larger than a width D1 (see FIG. 30) of the lightemitting device 100 and may be smaller than a width of the resin member450 in the X direction.

The resin member 450 may include a recess 420 (see FIG. 24). The recess420 may be disposed at a region corresponding to a protrusion portion ofanother resin member. The recess 420 may be a region where a part of thesecond side surface S12 is concave in a direction of the light emittingdevice 100. The resin member 450 in the recess 420 may be removed and apart of another resin member 450, for example, a protrusion portion maybe disposed. The recess 420 may have the same width in the seconddirection or may have a width that gradually increases as it is fartherfrom the light emitting device 100. A distribution of the light emittedvia the resin member 450 may vary due to the recess 420. Such a recess420 may be removed in the case of a single module, or in the case of aplurality of modules, a recess of the last resin member may be removed,but is not limited thereto. A depth K9 of the recess 420 in the firstdirection may be less than a length K8 of the protrusion portion 430.The depth K9 of the recess 420 may be 0.5 mm or more, for example, in arange of 1 to 3 mm. When the depth K9 of the recess 420 is deeper thanthe above range, the light emitting region may be reduced. When thedepth K9 is smaller than the above range, luminous intensity may bedecreased or dark portions may be generated around the protrusionportion of another resin member. A shape of the recess 420 maycorrespond to a shape of the protrusion portion 430, and may be apolygonal shape, for example, a quadrilateral shape. A width of therecess 420 may be a shape having the same width as it goes in a lightexit direction or is farther from the light emitting device 100. Asanother example, the width of the recess 420 may gradually increase asit is farther from the light emitting device 100. The shape of theprotrusion portion 430 may be a shape having the same width or a shapehaving a width that gradually increases. The shape of the recess 420 maybe a shape corresponding to that of the protrusion portion 430.

Although the lighting module of FIGS. 24 and 25 has been described asthe unit light emitting cell 450A, it may be implemented as a lightingmodule in which light emitting cells having a plurality of resin membersare arranged as in embodiment(s) described later.

FIGS. 26 to 28 illustrate another example of FIG. 24, a lighting modulein which a plurality of light emitting cells are arranged. FIG. 26 is aperspective view illustrating a lighting module, FIG. 27 is a plan viewof the lighting module of FIG. 26, FIG. 28 is a side cross-sectionalview of the lighting module of FIG. 26, FIG. 29 is a partial enlargedview of FIG. 28, FIG. 30 is a front view of the lighting module of FIG.26, FIG. 31 is a rear view of the lighting module of FIG. 26, FIG. 32 isa side cross-sectional view of the lighting module of FIG. 26, FIG. 33is an enlarged view of the lighting module of FIG. 32 or a lightemitting cell, and FIG. 34 is a cross-sectional view for explaining areflective portion of a resin member of the lighting module of FIG. 33.In describing such an embodiment, the same configuration and the samepart as that of the embodiment(s) disclosed above is referred to thedescription disclosed above, and may be selectively applied to thepresent embodiment.

Referring to FIGS. 26 to 34, a plurality of light emitting cells 450Amay be arranged on a substrate 401 in a lighting module 400A. At leasttwo light emitting cells 450A may be arranged on the substrate 401. Thelight emitting cells 450A may be arranged on the substrate 401 in one ora plurality of rows. A direction in which light of each of the lightemitting cells 450A is exited may be the same direction or in differentdirections.

As shown in FIGS. 26 and 27, a length Y1 in the Y direction of thesubstrate 401 in the lighting module 400A may be twice or more a widthX1 in the X direction. An area of the upper surface of the substrate 401may be greater than a sum of an area of a lower surface of the lightemitting cell 450A. A circumference of the upper surface of thesubstrate 401 may be disposed at a circumference of a side surface ofthe light emitting cell 450A. Here, the upper surface of the substrate401 may be the surface of the reflective member 410 shown in FIG. 25,but is not limited thereto. The width X1 of the substrate 401 may begreater than the length K2 of the resin member 450. The reflectivemember 410 may be disposed between the plurality of light emitting cells450A or a plurality of resin members 451 and 451A and the substrate 401.

The plurality of resin members 451 and 451A are arranged on thesubstrate 401 and each of the resin members 451 and 451A may cover thelight emitting device 100. The light emitting cell 450A may include eachof the resin members 451 and 451A and each of the light emitting devices100. The resin members 451 and 451A may include, for example, a firstresin member 451 and a second resin member 451A adjacent to the firstresin members 451 as a light transmitting member spaced apart from eachother. The first resin member 451 and the second resin member 451A maybe disposed alternately. The second resin member 451A may be arranged inthe light exit direction of the first resin member 451. The first resinmember 451 and the second resin member 451A may have the same shape andmay be arranged in the first direction. At least a portion of the firstresin member 451 and the second resin member 451A may be spaced apart ormay not be in contact with each other. The first resin member 451 andthe second resin member 451A may be physically separated. As anotherexample, the first resin member 451 and the second resin member 451A maybe partially connected, but is not limited thereto. The resin memberpositioned last among the plurality of resin members 451 and 451A willbe described as a third resin member 451C.

The lengths K1 of the first and second resin members 451 and 451A may beequal to each other. The length K1 may be the length of the first andsecond side surfaces S11 and S12 of the resin members 451 and 451A andmay be disposed to be long in the Y direction. A length K11 of the thirdresin member 451C may be equal to or shorter than the lengths K1 of thefirst and second resin members 451 and 451A. This may reduce or removethe depth of a recess 420A of the third resin member 451C so that thelength of the third resin member 451C may be different from that ofanother resin member.

The length K1 in the Y-direction of the first and second side surfacesS11 and S12 of the resin members 451 and 451A may be equal to ordifferent from the length K2 in the X direction, and may be at least 10mm or more. The length K1 may be in a range of 10 mm to 40 mm or 15 to25 mm. The length K2 may be 10 mm or more, and may be in a range of 10to 30 mm, or in a range of 13 to 25 mm. An area of the bottom of theresin members 451 and 451A may be a region in which one light emittingdevice 100 may be covered and may be a size of a unit cell havinguniform luminous intensity. The length K11 of the third resin member451C may be in a range of 10 to 40 mm, or in a range of 15 to 25 mm. Awidth of the third resin member 451C may be equal to the length K2 ofthe first and second resin members 451 and 451A. The length K2 of theresin members 451 and 451A may be smaller than the width X1 of thesubstrate 401. The length K2 and the length K1 of the resin members 451and 451A according to an embodiment may have a size such that theluminous intensity of the light emitted from each light emitting device100 (see FIG. 32) has a uniform distribution above a predeterminedlevel. When the length K2 and the length K1 are smaller than the range,the number of the light emitting cells may be increased, and when thelength K2 and the length K1 are larger than the range, a difference inthe uniformity of the luminous intensity may be large.

As shown in FIGS. 27 to 29, a gap portion 452 may be disposed betweenthe plurality of resin members 451 and 451A. The gap portion 452 may bedisposed between adjacent first and second resin members 451 and 451A tobe spaced apart from each other. The gap portion 452 may be disposed inthe X direction. A width G1 (see FIG. 29) of the gap portion 452 may bein a range of 0.5 mm or more, for example, 0.5 to 1.5 mm, and such awidth may be a cutting region at the time of a manufacturing process ora gap between injection molding frames at the time of an injectionprocess. When the resin members 451 and 451A are in contact with eachother, such a gap portion 452 may reduce problems due to expansion orcontraction between each other or luminous intensity differences.

As shown in FIG. 32, each of the resin members 451 and 451A may includea light emitting device 100 therein. A distance between the lightemitting devices 100 may correspond to the length K1 of the resinmembers 451 and 451A. The distance between the light emitting devices100 may be disposed in consideration of a desired amount of light oruniformity of light. One or a plurality of such light emitting devices100 may be disposed in the resin members 451 and 451A, and embodimentswill be described as an example in which the light emitting device 100is disposed in a single unit for convenience of explanation.

Referring to FIGS. 26 to 30 and FIG. 32, each of the resin members 451,451A, and 451C may include a protrusion portion 430. In each of theresin members 451, 451A, and 451C, the protrusion portion 430 may bedisposed at the surface of the light emitting device 100 and mayprotrude in the rear (−) direction. Each of the resin members 451, 451A,and 451C may include a reflective portion 442 as described above. Thereflective portion 442 may be disposed at one side of upper surfaces ofthe resin members 451, 451A, and 451C and may be connected to theprotrusion portions 430. A first region of the reflective portion 442disposed on the light emitting device 100 may have the same width as thewidth K6 of the protrusion portion 430, and a second region at the exitside of the light emitting device 100 may be the same as the length K2of the upper surfaces of the resin members 451, 451A, and 451C. Such areflective portion 442 may be overlapped on the light emitting device100 and may be connected to the exit portion 440. A width of the secondregion of the reflective portion 442 may be the same as the width (e.g.,K2) of the exit portion 440.

As shown in FIGS. 26, 27, and 31, the resin members 451 and 451A mayinclude a recess 420. The recess 420 may be disposed at a regionopposite to the protrusion portion 430 in each of the adjacent resinmembers 451 and 451A. At least three surfaces of the recess 420 maycorrespond to the protrusion portion 430. The recess 420 may include,for example, a first surface corresponding to the emitting region 101 ofthe light emitting device 100, and second and third surfaces facing eachother at opposite sides of the first surface. Side surfaces of theprotrusion portion 430 may face the first, second, and third surfaces ofthe recess 420. The second and third surfaces of such a recess 420 maybe perpendicular or inclined to a horizontal straight line of the firstsurface. The light emitting device 100 in another resin member may bedisposed in the recess 420. That is, a gap between the second and thirdsurfaces opposite to each other in the recess 420 may be uniform or maybe gradually widened as it is farther from the first surface. The gapbetween the second and third surfaces of such a recess 420 may be adistance that is not in contact with the side surfaces of the protrusionportion.

The protrusion portion 430 and the recess 420 may be disposed at aboundary between the adjacent resin members 451 and 451A. The protrusionportion 430 of the second resin member 451A may be disposed at therecess 420 of the first resin member 451. At least a portion of theprotrusion portion 430 of the second resin member 451A may be disposedat the recess 420 of the first resin member 451. Accordingly, aperipheral region (that is, a light emitting region) of the recess 420of another resin member may be disposed at the outer side of theprotrusion portion 430. Due to a coupling structure of the protrusionportion 430 and the recess 420, it is possible to suppress occurrence ofdark portions at a boundary between different resin members.

The third resin member 451C may be provided with the recess 420A or therecess 420A may be removed therefrom, and when the recess 420A isremoved, a second side surface of the third resin member 451C may bedisposed on the same straight line. In an embodiment, the recesses 420and the protrusion portions 430 may be disposed at the region betweenthe adjacent resin members 451 and 451A so that protrusions 422 and 424of the recess 420 may be disposed at opposite sides of the protrusionportion 430. At least a portion of the protrusion portion 430 may bedisposed at the recess 420 or at least a portion of the light emittingdevice 100 may be disposed thereat. As shown in FIG. 27, the recess 420may have a depth K9 that is larger than the length in the Y direction ofthe light emitting device 100. The depth K9 in the Y direction of therecess 420 may be smaller than the length K8 of the protrusion portion430 and may range from 0.5 mm or more, for example, 1 to 3 mm. When thedepth K9 of the recess 420 is deeper than the above range, the lightemitting region may be reduced. When the depth K9 is smaller than theabove range, luminous intensity may be decreased or dark portions may begenerated around the protrusion portion 430. A shape of the recess 420may correspond to a shape of the protrusion portion 430, and may be apolygonal shape, for example, a quadrilateral shape. The shape of therecess 420 may be a shape having the same width as it goes in the lightexit direction or is farther from the light emitting device 100, or ashape having a width that gradually increases. The shape of theprotrusion portion 430 may be a shape having the same width or a shapehaving a width that gradually increases. A height of the resin member ina peripheral region of the recess 420 may be lower than a height of theprotrusion portion 430.

The resin members 451 and 451A may include guide protrusions 422 and424. The guide protrusions 422 and 424 may be disposed at opposite sidesof the recess 420 to face each other. The guide protrusions 422 and 424may be a region, which is disposed at opposite sides of the protrusionportion 430 and in which light is emitted, and the light emitted fromthe light emitting device 100 may be emitted. The guide protrusions 422and 424 may have a reflective member 410 disposed at a lower portionthereof and an exit portion 440 or a light extraction structure disposedat a surface thereof. Accordingly, the guide protrusions 422 and 424 mayexit the incident light in an upward direction, and may suppress orblock occurrence of the dark portions in the peripheral region of theprotrusion portion 430. Thicknesses of the first and second guideprotrusions 422 and 424 may be thinner than a thickness of theprotrusion portion 430. The first and second guide protrusions 422 and424 may be overlapped with the protrusion portion 430 in the X-axisdirection.

The gap portion 452 may extend to the recess 420 so as to prevent theadjacent resin members 451 and 451A from contacting with each other inthe recess 420. Since such a gap portion 452 is provided as an air gapin the region between the adjacent resin members 451 and 451A,refractive index of the resin members 451 and 451A is different fromthat of the gap portion 452 so that leakage of light may be suppressedor the leaked light may be reflected. The gap portion 452 according toan embodiment may prevent warpage at the connection portion of the resinmembers due to thermal expansion or contraction between the resinmembers 451 and 451A.

Referring to FIGS. 27 and 30, the resin members 451, 451A, and 451C maybe vertical surfaces or inclined surfaces of the third and fourth sidesurfaces S13 and S14 in the second direction, but are not limitedthereto. A part of the second side surface S12 adjacent to the gapportion 452 may correspond to the guide protrusions 422 and 424. Thefirst side surface S11 may be a front surface between the third andfourth side surfaces S13 and S14 and the second side surface S12 may bea rear surface between the third and fourth side surfaces S13 and S14. Aboundary portion between the first side surface S11 and the third andfourth side surfaces S13 and S14 may be an angular surface or a curvedsurface. The boundary portion between the first side surface S11 and thethird and fourth side surfaces S13 and S14 may be an angular surface ora curved surface. The outer side first side surface S11 of theprotrusion portion 430 may face at least one surface of the adjacentrecess 420.

The first side surface S11 of the resin members 451, 451A, and 451C mayinclude the first concave region S131 and the second concave region S141at an outer side of the protrusion portion 430. The protrusion portion430 may be disposed between the first concave region S131 and the secondconcave region S141. The first and second concave regions S131 and S141may be regions that are not overlapped with the light emitting device100 in the first direction. The first concave region S131 may bedisposed between the protrusion portion 430 and the third side surfaceS13 and the second concave region S141 may be disposed between theprotrusion portion 430 and the fourth side surface S14.

The width K6 of the protrusion portion 430 in the second direction maybe greater than the width D1 (see FIG. 30) of the light emitting device100 and may be greater than the width K4 of the first concave regionS131. The width K6 of the protrusion portion 430 may be 30% or more, forexample, in the range of 35% to 70% of the width K2 of the resin member451. The width K6 of the protrusion portion 430 may be twice or less thewidth D1 of the light emitting device 100. When the width K6 of theprotrusion portion 430 is larger than the above range, dark portions atthe boundary portion may be generated. When the width K6 is less thanthe above range, a size of the light emitting device 100 may be reduced.A light exit area of the guide protrusions 422 and 424 may be reduced.Here, a direction of the width of the protrusion portion 430 may be adirection perpendicular to an optical axis.

Referring to FIGS. 27 and 31, a width K7 of the recesses 420 and 420Amay be greater than the width K6 of the protrusion portion 430. Therecesses 420 and 420A may be wider than a width K12 of each of the guideprotrusions 422 and 424 and may be 30% or more, for example, in a rangeof 40% to 70% of the length K2 of the resin member. The width K7 of therecesses 420 and 420A may be not more than twice the width K6 of theprotrusion portion 430 in the X direction and, for example, may be twiceor less the width D1 of the light emitting device 100. When the width K7of the recess 420 is larger than the above range, optical loss may beincreased or dark portions may be generated at a periphery of theprotrusion portion 430. In addition, the area of the light exit of theguide protrusions 422 and 424 may be reduced.

The width K12 of each of the guide protrusions 422 and 424 may be equalto each other. In this case, a light distribution or a light emissionarea at the outer side of the protrusion portion 430 may be providedequally. A thickness T6 of the guide protrusions 422 and 424 shown inFIG. 31 may be disposed to be thinner than the thickness T5 of theprotrusion portion 430 shown in FIG. 30, so that it is possible toprevent luminous intensity of a peripheral region of the protrusionportion 430 from deteriorating. An outer side surface S15 of the guideprotrusions 422 and 424 may be formed as a vertical or inclined surface.The guide protrusions 422 and 424 may be overlapped with the lightemitting device 100 and the protrusion portion 430 in the seconddirection or the width direction.

As shown in FIGS. 28 and 29, each light emitting cell 450A may exitlight emitted from the light emitting device 100 as a uniform surfacelight source, and occurrence of dark portions may be suppressed by astructure of the protrusion portion 430 and the guide protrusions 422and 424 at the boundary region between the resin members 451 and 451A.Further, an amount of light exited from the region adjacent to the lightemitting device 100 may be suppressed by the reflective portion 442 ofthe resin members 451 and 451A so that the occurrence of dark portionsmay be suppressed and the light having a uniform light distribution maybe emitted from an entire surface by the exit portion 440.

As shown in FIGS. 33 and 34, the reflective portion 442 of the resinmembers 451 and 451A may be disposed at a region deviating from an angleR11 of a straight line connecting the high point Px to the center of theemitting region 101 with reference to a straight line or the opticalaxis Y0. The high point Px may be a point of the half angle of the beamspread angle or a high point of the resin members 451 and 451A. Thereflective portion 422 may have an angle R12 of 45 degrees or more, forexample, 45 to 55 degrees from the straight line with respect to theemitting region 101 of the light emitting device 100. The reflectiveportion 422 may be disposed in a range of −10 degrees or less and +45degrees or less with respect to the straight line Z1 in the Z directionat the emitting region 101 of the light emitting device 100, so that theincident light may be effectively reflected.

As shown in FIG. 34, the reflective portion 442 of the resin members 451and 451A may have a structure 442A of a plurality of steps and as shownin FIG. 35, may be formed in a curved surface having a plurality ofinflection points or different radii of curvature instead of having astepped structure. As shown in FIG. 35, the reflective portion 442 maybe disposed in a range of −10 degrees or less and +45 degrees or lesswith respect to the straight line Z1 in the Z direction at the emittingregion 101 of the light emitting device 100, so that the incident lightmay be effectively reflected. The reflective member 410 according to anembodiment will be described, for example, with reference to FIGS. 7 and8 and may be selectively applied to the present embodiment. As anotherexample, when a layer of highly reflective material is disposed on theupper surface of the substrate 401, the reflective member 410 may beremoved. The exit portion 440 of the resin member 451 may selectivelyinclude FIG. 10, 13 or 15 with respect to the light extractionstructure, and a detailed description thereof will be omitted.

FIG. 36 is a perspective view illustrating a first modified example ofthe lighting module of FIG. 24 or FIG. 26, FIG. 37 is a partialperspective view of the lighting module of FIG. 36, FIG. 38 is a frontview of the lighting module of FIG. 36, and FIG. 39 is a partial sidecross-sectional view of the lighting module of FIG. 36. In describingsuch an embodiment, the same configuration as that of embodiment(s)disclosed above is referred to the description of embodiment(s)disclosed above, and may be selectively applied to the presentembodiment.

Referring to FIGS. 36 to 39, the lighting module may include a pluralityof light emitting cells 450A, and each of the plurality of lightemitting cells 450A may be disposed on a substrate 401, respectively.

Each of the light emitting cells 450A includes a light emitting device100 and resin members 451 and 451A. The resin members 451 and 451Ainclude a protrusion portion 430 and a recess 420 covering the lightemitting device 100. Here, the resin members 451 and 451A are disposedto be adjacent to each other. The third resin member 451C, which is thelast resin member in the lighting module, may have the protrusionportion 430 and the recess 420 may be removed, but are not limitedthereto.

The protrusion portion 430, the recess 420, the reflective portion 442and the exit portion 440 of the resin members 451 and 451A will bedescribed with reference to the description of the above-describedembodiment. As shown in FIG. 38, the reflective portion 442 may functionas a center-side reflective portion located at a region corresponding tothe protrusion portion 430. The resin members 451 and 451A may includeside reflective portions 446 and 447 having inclined upper surfaces atopposite sides of the reflective portion 442. The width in the Xdirection of the reflective portion 442 of the resin members 451 and451A may be the same as the width K6 of the protrusion portion 430 sothat the incident light may be reflected.

The side reflective portions 446 and 447 may include first and secondside reflective portions 446 and 447 spaced apart from each other, thefirst side reflective portion 446 may be disposed in a corner regionbetween the protrusion portion 430 and the third side surface S13 of theresin members 451 and 451A, and the second side reflective portion 447may be disposed in a corner region between the protrusion portion 430and the fourth side surface S14 of the resin members 451 and 451A. Thefirst side reflective portion 446 and the second side reflective portion447 may be disposed at opposite sides of the reflective portion 442.

As shown in FIG. 38, upper surfaces of the first and second sidereflective portions 446 and 447 may be formed to be inclined laterallyfrom the reflective portion 442. The inclined upper surfaces of suchfirst and second side reflective portions 446 and 447 may be disposed atthe outer side of the protrusion portion 430 having the light emittingdevice and extend to opposite sides of the reflective portion 442. Aninclination angle R13 of the inclined upper surface may be in a range of25 to 89 degrees, for example, 25 to 35 degrees, the incident light maybe reflected to the reflective member 410, and the reflected light maybe exited via the inclined upper surface. Accordingly, the reflectiveportion 442 located at the periphery of the protrusion portion 430 mayprevent hot spots, and the inclined upper surfaces of the sidereflective portions 446 and 447 block light leaked via the lateraldirection to be exited, and thus it is possible to prevent a decrease ina light distribution at the boundary region between adjacent resinmembers 451 and 451A. The inclined upper surfaces of the side reflectiveportions 446 and 447 may have a height gradually lowered as they gotoward an outer side direction, for example, the second direction fromthe reflective portion 442. The inclined upper surfaces of the sidereflective portions 446 and 447 may be disposed in the −Y direction orthe rear direction with respect to the exit portion 440. The sidereflective portions 446 and 447 may be disposed at regions correspondingto the guide protrusions 422 and 424 of other resin members.

The reflective portion 442 at a region between the protrusion portion430 and the exit portion 440 and the first and second side reflectiveportions 446 and 447 at opposite sides of the reflective portion 442 inthe second direction may be provided, and thus it is possible to preventhot spots in the center region adjacent to the light emitting device 100due to the light reflected by the reflective portion 442, to reducelight loss by the inclined upper surfaces of the first and second sidereflective portions 446 and 447, and to improve light extractionefficiency in the periphery of the protrusion portion 430.

As shown in FIG. 38, the first side reflective portion 446 may have afirst reflective side surface S16 extending between a side surface ofthe protrusion portion 430 and a third side surface S13, and the secondside reflective portion 447 may have a second reflective side surfaceS17 extending between a side surface of the protrusion portion 430 and afourth side surface S14. The first and second reflective side surfacesS16 and S17 of such first and second side reflective portions 446 and447 may be formed to be inclined with respect to the horizontal surfacesof the third and fourth side surfaces S13 and S14, so that it ispossible to reflect light leaked via the adjacent resin members 451 and451A. A distance between the reflective side surfaces S16 and S17 of thefirst and second side reflective portions 446 and 447 may graduallyincrease as it is farther from the light emitting device 100 and may beequal to a distance between the third and fourth side surfaces S13 andS14.

A width of an upper surface of the first and second side reflectiveportions 446 and 447, that is, a width of an upper surface in the seconddirection, may be gradually narrowed as it is farther from thereflective portion 442. A high point height T7 of the first and secondside reflective portions 446 and 447 may be disposed to be lower thanthe high point of the reflective portion 442 and higher than the lowpoint of the reflective portion 442, and a low point height may bedisposed to be lower than the upper surface of the protrusion portion430 and higher than the optical axis. Such first and second sidereflective portions 446 and 447 may reflect the light leaked in thelateral direction so that the light reflected by the reflective member410 may be exited via the inclined upper surface.

The exit portion 440 may be disposed at a side of light exit as comparedwith the reflective portion 442 and the first and second side reflectiveportions 446 and 447, and thus light exit efficiency may be improved. Arecess of the last third resin member 451C in the resin member may beabsent or may be smaller than the depth of the recess 420 of anotherresin member. The length K11 of such a third resin member 451C may besmaller than the length K1 of other resin members 451 and 451A.

FIG. 40 is a perspective view illustrating a second modified example ofthe lighting module of FIG. 22 or FIG. 26, FIG. 41 is a partial enlargedview of the lighting module of FIG. 40, FIG. 42 is a front view of thelighting module of FIG. 40, and FIG. 43 is a partial sidecross-sectional view of the lighting module of FIG. 40. In describingsuch an embodiment, the same configuration as that of the embodiment(s)disclosed above is referred to the description of embodiment(s)disclosed above, and may be selectively applied to the presentembodiment.

Referring to FIGS. 40 to 43, the lighting module includes a plurality oflight emitting cells 450A. The lighting module may have a plurality ofresin members 451 and 451A arranged on a substrate 401, and the resinmembers 451 and 451A may include a protrusion portion 430 and an exitportion 440 in which a light emitting device is disposed.

The resin members 451 and 451A may include a reflective portion 442between the protrusion portion 430 and the exit portion 440 and thereflective portion 442 may be formed as a convex curved surface. A widthin the second direction of the reflective portion 442 may be smallerthan a width K6 in the second direction of the protrusion portion 430.

Side wall protrusions 448 and 449 may be disposed at an outer side ofthe reflective portion 442, the side wall protrusions 448 and 449 may befirst and second side wall protrusions 448 and 449 spaced apart fromeach other to correspond to each other, and the first side wallprotrusion 448 and the second side wall protrusion 449 may be disposedto face each other. The first and second side wall protrusions 448 and449 may face each other at opposite sides of the reflective portion 442and may be formed at a height higher than a height of the reflectiveportion 442. A pattern of the exit portion 440 may be disposed at uppersurfaces of the first and second side wall protrusions 448 and 449, andas a region in which the first and second side wall protrusions 448 and449 are disposed is adjacent to the light emitting device 100, the firstand second side wall protrusions 448 and 449 may have a higher height.Such first and second side wall protrusions 448 and 449 may exit lightvia an outer side of the region of the reflective portion 442. Outerside surfaces S18 and S19 of the first and second side wall protrusions448 and 449 may be formed to be inclined surfaces or concave curvedsurfaces with respect to the third and fourth side surfaces S13 and S14.The concave curved surface may totally reflect light incident from aninside. The outer side surfaces S18 and S19 may have a height graduallyhigher as they are adjacent to the light emitting device 100.

The guide protrusions 422 and 424 of the resin members 451 and 451A maybe disposed at opposite sides of the recess 420 and may extend alongopposite sides of the protrusion portion 430. The guide protrusions 422and 424 of the resin members 451 and 451A may be respectively disposedat outer sides of the first and second side wall protrusions 448 and 449and disposed between the reflective portion 442 and the guideprotrusions 422 and 424. A gap portion 452 may be disposed betweenadjacent resin members 451 and 451A and the gap portion 452 may separatethe protrusion portion 430 and separate apart the adjacent guideprotrusions 422 and 424 from the side wall protrusions 448 and 449. Sucha gap portion 452 may be disposed in a curved shape along an outercurved surface of the side wall protrusions 448 and 449, but is notlimited thereto. As shown in FIGS. 41 and 43, light may be emitted bythe protrusion portion 430, the side wall protrusions 448 and 449, andthe guide protrusions 422 and 424 covering the light emitting device 100in the peripheral region of the recess 420, and thus it is possible tosuppress occurrence of dark portions at the boundary regions of thedifferent resin members 451 and 451A.

A depth of the recess 420 of the last third resin member 451C in theresin member may be smaller than that of the recess 420 of other resinmembers 451 and 451A, or may not be present. A length K11 of such athird resin member 451C may be smaller than a length K1 of other resinmembers 451 and 451A. The length K11 of such a last third resin member451C may vary depending on a depth of the recess 420.

FIG. 44 is a perspective view illustrating a third modified example ofthe lighting module of FIG. 24 or 26, and FIG. 45 is a front view of thelighting module of FIG. 44. In describing such an embodiment, the sameconfiguration as that of embodiment(s) disclosed above is referred tothe description of embodiment(s) disclosed above, and may be selectivelyapplied to the present embodiment.

Referring to FIGS. 44 and 45, the lighting module may include aplurality of light emitting cells 450A, and each of the plurality oflight emitting cells 450A may be disposed on a substrate 401,respectively.

Each of the light emitting cells 450A includes a light emitting device100 and resin members 451 and 451A. The resin members 451 and 451Ainclude a protrusion portion 430 covering the light emitting device 100and a recess 420 in which a protrusion portion of the adjacent resinmember is disposed. Here, the resin members 451 and 451A includeadjacent first and second resin members 451 and 451A, the first andsecond resin members 451 and 451A may have the protrusion portion 430and the recess 420, and the third resin member 451C, which is the laststructure of the resin member, may have the protrusion portion 430 andmay be formed with the recess 420A or may have a small depth, but is notlimited thereto.

The protrusion portion 430, the recess 420, the reflective portion 442and the exit portion 440 of the adjacent resin members 451 and 451A arereferred to the description of the above-disclosed embodiment. The widthK6 in the second direction of the reflective portion 442 of the resinmembers 451 and 451A may be equal to the width of the protrusion portion430 so that the incident light may be reflected. The reflective portion442 may function as a center-side reflective portion located at a regioncorresponding to the protrusion portion 430.

The resin members 451 and 451A may include first and second sidereflective portions 446A and 447A having inclined upper surfaces atopposite sides of the reflective portion 442. The first side reflectiveportion 446A may be disposed in a corner region between the protrusionportion 430 and the third side surface S13 of the resin members 451 and451A, and the second side reflective portion 447A may be disposed in acorner region between the protrusion portion 430 and the fourth sidesurface S14 of the resin members 451 and 451A. The first side reflectiveportion 446A and the second side reflective portion 447A may be disposedat opposite sides of the reflective portion 442. High points of thefirst and second side reflective portions 446A and 447A may be higherthan a low point of the reflective portion 442, and may be lower than ahigh point thereof. A width K13 (see FIG. 44) of the first and secondside reflective portions 446A and 447A may be equal to or smaller than alength of the reflective portion 442 in the second direction. The firstside reflective portion 446A may extend in a direction of the third sidesurface S13 from the reflective portion 442, and the second sidereflective portion 447A may extend in a direction of the fourth sidesurface from the reflective portion 442.

As shown in FIG. 44, upper surfaces of the first and second sidereflective portions 446A and 447A may be formed to be inclined in anouter side direction from the reflective portion 442. The inclined uppersurfaces of such first and second side reflective portions 446 and 447may be disposed at the outer side of the protrusion portion 430 havingthe light emitting device 100 and extend to opposite sides of thereflective portion 442. An inclination angle R13 of the inclined uppersurface of the first and second reflective portions 446A and 447A may bein a range of 25 to 89 degrees, the incident light may be reflected tothe reflective member 410, and the reflected light may be exited via theinclined upper surface. Accordingly, the reflective portion 442 locatedat the periphery of the protrusion portion 430 may prevent hot spots,and the inclined upper surfaces of the side reflective portions 446A and447A block light leaked via the lateral direction to be exited, and thusit is possible to prevent a decrease in a light distribution at theboundary region between adjacent resin members 451 and 451A. Theinclined upper surfaces of the side reflective portions 446A and 447Amay have a height gradually lowered as they are farther toward an outerside direction, for example, the X direction from the reflective portion442. The inclined upper surfaces of the side reflective portions 446 and447 may be disposed in the rear direction with respect to the exitportion 440. Here, the rear direction may be a direction toward theprotrusion portion 430 from the resin member 451 or 451A with respect tothe exit portion 440.

A high point height T7 of the first and second side reflective portions446 and 447 may be disposed to be lower than the high point of thereflective portion 442 and higher than the low point of the reflectiveportion 442, and a low point height may be disposed to be lower than theupper surface of the protrusion portion 430 and higher than the opticalaxis. A linear distance K4 of the first and second side reflectiveportions 446A and 447A may be 1 mm or more, for example, in a range of 1to 10 mm, or in a range of 3.5 to 5.5 mm. Since the inclined uppersurfaces of such first and second side reflective portions 446A and 447Amay be formed in a range of 20% to 40% of the width K5 of the resinmembers 451 and 451A and may have the same distance at opposite sides,light may have a uniform distribution. In an embodiment, the reflectiveportion 442 at a region between the protrusion portion 430 and the exitportion 440 and the first and second side reflective portions 446A and447A at opposite sides of the reflective portion 442 in the seconddirection may be provided, and thus it is possible to prevent hot spotsin the center region adjacent to the light emitting device 100 due tothe light reflected by the reflective portion 442 to reduce light lossby the inclined upper surfaces of the first and second side reflectiveportions 446A and 447A, and to improve light extraction efficiency inthe periphery of the protrusion portion 430.

The first side reflective portion 446A may have a third side surface S13extending between a side surface of the protrusion portion 430 and athird side surface S13, and the second side reflective portion 447A mayhave a fourth side surface S14 extending between a side surface of theprotrusion portion 430 and a fourth side surface S14. The third andfourth side surfaces S13 and S14 of such first and second sidereflective portions 446A and 447A may be formed to be stepped withrespect to the horizontal surfaces of the third and fourth side surfacesS13 and S14, so that it is possible to reflect light leaked via theadjacent resin members 451 and 451A.

The exit portion 440 may be disposed at a side of light exit as comparedwith the reflective portion 442 and the first and second side reflectiveportions 446A and 447A, and thus light exit efficiency may be improved.A depth of the recess 420 of the last third resin member among the resinmembers may be smaller than that of the recess 420 of other resinmembers 451 and 451A, or may not be present.

FIG. 46 is a perspective view illustrating a fourth modified example ofthe lighting module of FIGS. 24 and 25. In describing such anembodiment, the same configuration as that of embodiment(s) disclosedabove is referred to the description of embodiment(s) disclosed above,and may be selectively applied to the present embodiment.

Referring to FIG. 46, the lighting module includes a substrate 401, aplurality of light emitting devices 100 arranged in the second directionfrom an edge of the substrate 401, a reflective member 410 on thesubstrate 401, and a resin member 455 having an exit portion 440 on thesubstrate 401 and the light emitting element 100.

The light emitting devices 100 may be arranged at a predetermineddistance along the X direction at an edge in a longitudinal direction ofthe substrate 401. The light emitting device 100 may be arranged alongat least one edge, that is, a long side edge, of the substrate 401.

The light emitting device 100 may be arranged along a thick region ofthe region of the resin member 455. A thickness of the resin member 455may be thicker in the region in which the light emitting device 100 isdisposed and thinner as it is farther from the light emitting device100. The pattern of the exit portion 440 of the resin member 455 may bearranged alternately in the optical axis or the first direction and maybe disposed at a length in the second direction perpendicular to thefirst direction or the optical axis. A length of each pattern may beequal to a length Y2 of the resin member 455. A longitudinal directionof the prism pattern may be the same as a direction in which the lightemitting devices 100 are arranged. The prism patterns may be arranged ina direction perpendicular to the arrangement direction of the lightemitting devices 100.

The resin member 455 may have a protrusion portion 430 and a reflectiveportion 442. The length Y2 of the resin member 455 in the firstdirection may be greater than a length X2 in the second direction andmay be, for example, twice or more. A distance B5 between the lightemitting devices 100 may be in a range of 100 mm or less, for example,in a range of 1 to 30 mm or 15 to 25 mm. When the distance B5 betweenthe light emitting devices 100 is smaller than the above range, thenumber of the light emitting devices 100 may be increased, and when thedistance B5 is larger than the above range, dark portions may begenerated. The length X2 of the resin member 455 may be a lengthincluding the protrusion portion 430.

The protrusion portion 430 may be disposed at a length equal to theresin member 455, or may have an open region in a region between thelight emitting devices 100. The reflective portion 442 may be formed asa curved surface which is convex upward from the front of the protrusionportion 430. Such a reflective portion 442 may be disposed between theprotrusion portion 430 and the exit portion 440 to reflect light thatdeviates from a beam spread angle of light. Although the lighting moduleaccording to an embodiment has been described as one, but the lightingmodule may be disposed in plural as shown in FIG. 26. In this case, inthe resin member of each lighting module, the protrusion portionaccording to an embodiment may be disposed at the portion in which thelight emitting device is disposed and the recess according to anembodiment may be disposed at an exit side so as to be coupled to eachother, and thus it is possible to prevent a decrease in light efficiencyat a boundary portion.

FIGS. 47 to 50 are modified examples of a protrusion portion and arecess of the resin member of the lighting module according to anembodiment.

Referring to FIG. 47, the adjacent protrusion portion 430 and recess 420in the resin member 450 may have a width gradually wider and at leastone of a center of the recess 420 and a center of the protrusion portion430 may be disposed on a straight line or the optical axis Y0 or tiltedin an angle R14 of 45 degrees or less, for example, in a range of 1 to45 degrees. When this is applied to a curved or bent lamp structuredepending on a type of application being applied, the protrusion portion430 may be coupled to the recess 420 in the above angle.

Referring to FIG. 48, the centers of the adjacent protrusion portion 430and recess 420 in the resin member 450 may be disposed on the centerline with the same straight line or on the optical axis Y0. At thispoint, a distance A2 between the straight line or the optical axis Y0and the third side surface S13 of the resin member 450 may be differentfrom a distance A3 between the straight line or the optical axis Y0 andthe fourth side surface S14, and for example, the distance A2 may begreater than the distance A3. At least one of the center of the recess420 and the center of the protrusion portion 430 may be disposed on thestraight line or the optical axis Y0 or may be tilted in an angle R14range of 45 degrees or less, for example, 1 to 45 degrees. When this isapplied to a curved or bent lamp structure depending on a type ofapplication being applied, the protrusion portion 430 may be coupled tothe recess 420 in the above angle.

Referring to FIG. 49, adjacent protrusion portion 430 and recess 420 inthe resin member 450 may be a curved surface at a corner portion, andsuch a curved surface may suppress interference with each other andimprove reflection efficiency of light.

Referring to FIG. 50, the adjacent protrusion portion 430 and recess 420in the resin member 450 may be disposed to be adjacent to the third sidesurface S13 rather than the fourth side surface S14. Here, the lightemitting device 100 may be disposed in an oblique shape, and irradiatelight to an entire region. When a plurality of resin members 451 and451A are disposed at the resin member, at least one protrusion portion430 and a recess adjacent thereto may be disposed to be adjacent to thethird side surface S13, so that they may be applied to curved or bentparts in a curved or bent lamp.

FIGS. 51 and 52 illustrate a modified example in which an arrangementshape of the lighting module is modified. Referring to FIGS. 51 and 52,a plurality of light emitting cells 450C and 450D may be disposed in nrows and m columns of the lighting module, and the condition of n>1 andm>1 may be satisfied. The light emitting cells 450C of the n rows andthe light emitting cells 450D of the m columns may be disposed to beintersecting, corresponding to, or adjacent to each other.

Referring to FIG. 52, the lighting module may have a curved edge on thesubstrate 401, and a plurality of light emitting cells 450E may bearranged on the substrate 401. The plurality of light emitting cells450E may be formed in a curved shape along the curved edge. That is,third and fourth side surfaces S13 and S14 of the resin member of eachlight emitting cell 450E are formed in a curved shape and an opticalaxis of each light emitting cell 450E may be disposed on different axes.When this is applied to a curved or bent lamp structure depending on atype of application being applied, the protrusion portion may be coupledto the recess in the above angle.

FIG. 53 is a view of a lighting device having a lighting moduleaccording to an embodiment. The lighting module in the lighting deviceaccording to the embodiment will be described with reference to theabove description. The light module 400B includes a substrate 401, aplurality of light emitting devices 100 on the substrate 401, a resinmember 450 and a reflective member 410. The resin member 450 may includea plurality of resin members. An optical member 230 may be disposed onthe lighting module 400B, and the optical member 230 may diffuse andtransmit incident light. The optical member 230 uniformly diffuses andemits the surface light source emitted through the resin member 450. Theoptical member 230 may include an optical lens or an inner lens, and theoptical lens may condense the light toward the target or change the pathof the light. The optical member 230 may include a plurality of lensportions 231 on at least one of the upper surface and the lower surfaceof the optical member 230, and the lens portions 231 may have a shapeprotruding downward from the optical member 230 or may have a shapeprotruding upward from the optical member 230. Such an optical member230 may control the light distribution characteristics of the lightingdevice.

The optical member 230 may be spaced from the lighting module 200B, forexample, the substrate 201 by 10 mm or more, for example, in a range of15 mm to 100 mm. when the distance is out of the above range, a lightintensity may be lowered and when the distance is smaller than the aboverange, the uniformity of light may be lowered. The lighting module 200may include a heat dissipation plate (not shown) at a bottom surfacethereof. The heat dissipation plate may include a plurality of heatdissipation fins and may dissipate heat conducted to the substrate 201.The heat dissipation plate may include at least one of metals such asaluminum, copper, magnesium, nickel, or an alloy thereof. Such thelighting module refers to the configuration of the above-describedembodiment, and is selectively applicable to this embodiment.

Fifth Embodiment

FIG. 54 is a perspective view illustrating a lighting module accordingto a first embodiment, FIG. 55 is a partial side cross-sectional view ofthe lighting module of FIG. 54, FIG. 56 is a partial plan view of thelighting module of FIG. 54, FIG. 57 is a side cross-sectional view ofthe lighting module of FIG. 56, FIG. 58 is a side cross-sectional viewof the lighting module of FIG. 57, FIG. 59 is a partial enlarged view ofthe lighting module of FIG. 58, and FIG. 60 is a partial enlarged viewof the lighting module of FIG. 58. The configuration of the lightingmodule according to a fifth embodiment is referred to the description ofembodiments disclosed above, and may be selectively applied to thepresent embodiment.

Referring to FIGS. 54 to 60, a lighting module 500 according to thefifth embodiment may include a substrate 401, a light emitting device100 disposed on the substrate 401, and a resin member 550 made of alight transmitting material and covering the light emitting device 100on the substrate 401.

The lighting module 500 may emit the light emitted from the lightemitting device 100 as a surface light source. The lighting module 500may include a reflective member 410 disposed on the substrate 401. Oneor a plurality of light emitting cells 550A may be arranged in thelighting module 500. The plurality of light emitting cells 550A may bearranged on the substrate 401 in a predetermined direction. The lightemitting cells 550A may emit light of the same color by the lightemitting device 100. The plurality of light emitting devices 100 mayemit light of a single color.

The resin member 550 may be disposed on the substrate 401. The resinmember 550 may be disposed on an entire or a part of an upper surface ofthe substrate 401. An area of a lower surface of the resin member 550may be equal to or smaller than that of the upper surface of thesubstrate 401. A plurality of the resin members 550 may be arranged inone direction. The resin member 550 may be formed of a transparentmaterial. The resin member 550 may include a resin material such assilicone or epoxy. The resin member 550 may include a thermosettingresin material and may selectively include, for example, PC, OPS, PMMA,PVC, or the like. The resin member 550 may be formed of glass, but isnot limited thereto. For example, a material of the resin member 550 isreferred to the description of the above-disclosed embodiments.

The resin member 550 may protect the light emitting device 100 bysealing the light emitting device 100 and reduce loss of light emittedfrom the light emitting device 100. The resin member 550 may preventmoisture penetration by sealing the surface of the light emitting device100. The resin member 550 may be in contact with side surfaces of thelight emitting device 100 and an emitting region 101. A part of theresin member 550 may be disposed at an opening 418 of the reflectivemember 410. As shown in FIG. 55, the resin member 550 may be disposed ateach of the light emitting cells 550A and be spaced apart from eachother. The resin members 550 may be spaced apart at a predetermineddistance or may be disposed at an irregular distance. Two side surfacesS11 and S12 of different resin members may face in a gap portion 552between the resin members 550. The adjacent resin members 550 may beseparated from or connected to each other. When the resin members 550are connected to each other, the resin members 550 may be partiallyconnected.

The resin member 550 may include first and second side surfaces S11 andS12 opposite to each other and third and fourth side surfaces S13 andS14 opposite to each other. The first side surface S11 may be adjacentto the light emitting device 100 and may face a part, for example, arear surface of the light emitting device 100. The first side surfaceS11 may be a surface of the opposite side of the emitting region 101 ofthe light emitting device 100. The second side surface S12 may be asurface facing the first side surface S11 and may face the emittingregion 101 of the light emitting device 100. The third and fourth sidesurfaces S13 and S14 may be side surfaces adjacent to the first andsecond side surfaces S11 and S12 and may face each other.

A thickness of the resin member 550 may vary depending on the region. Athickness T2 of the thickest region in the Z direction in the resinmember 550 is thicker than a thickness T1 of the light emitting device100 and a thickness T3 of the thinnest region may be greater than orequal to the thickness T1 of the light emitting device 100. At least aportion of the thickest region in the resin member 550 may be overlappedwith the light emitting device 100 in the vertical direction.

The maximum thickness T2 of the resin member 550 may be the thickness T1of the light emitting device 100 or more and may be 20 mm or less. Themaximum thickness T2 of the resin member 550 may be, for example, in arange of 1.7 to 10 mm or in a range of 1.7 to 4 mm. When the maximumthickness T2 of the resin member 550 is larger than the above range,light efficiency may be lowered or a module thickness may be increased.When the maximum thickness T2 is smaller than the above range, lightuniformity may be lowered. The minimum thickness T3 of the resin member550 may be 1 mm or more and less than the maximum thickness T2. Theminimum thickness T3 may be in a range of 1 to 2 mm or in a range of 1.4to 2 mm. The minimum thickness T3 may be greater than the thickness T1of the light emitting device 100.

A length K1 in a first direction Y of the resin member 550 may be equalto or greater than a length K2 in a second direction X as shown in FIG.56 when viewed from the top. The length K2 in the X direction may be thelength of the first and second side surfaces S11 and S12 disposed onopposite sides of the resin member 550 in the Y direction. The length K1in the Y direction may be 10 mm or more, for example, in a range of 10to 40 mm or in a range of 10 to 20 mm. The length K2 in the X directionmay be in a range of 10 mm or more, for example, 10 to 30 mm or 15 to 23mm. A size of the resin member 550 may be provided in consideration ofthe light uniformity, and may vary depending on applications. The shapeof a top view of the resin member 550 may be a polygonal shape, forexample, a quadrilateral shape, a curved shape, or a bent shape.

The thinnest region of the resin member 550 may be the farthest regionbased on the emitting region 101 of the light emitting device 100. Theminimum thickness T3 of the resin member 550 may be 1 mm or more basedon an upper surface of the substrate 401 or not less than the thicknessT1 of the light emitting device 100. The lowest point of the resinmember 550 may be higher than an upper surface of the light emittingdevice 100. The lowest point of an upper surface of the resin member 550may be at the same height as or higher than a height of a straight lineor an optical axis Y0. Side surfaces S11, S12, S13, and S14 of the resinmember 550 may be coated with a metal material such as aluminum,chromium, or barium sulfate, but are not limited thereto.

The resin member 550 according to an embodiment includes an exit surface540. The exit surface 540 may include a light extraction structure (oran optical pattern) as the upper surface of the resin member 550. Thelight extraction structure may have a concave portion (for example, I3in FIG. 55) and a convex portion (for example, J3 in FIG. 55), and mayreflect or transmit incident light, or may change a critical angle. Thelight extraction structure may be formed integrally with the resinmember 550. The resin member 550 and the light extraction structure maybe formed of the same material. The light extraction structure may havea pattern having a predetermined distance or irregular distance. Theexit surface 540 may be adjacent to the substrate 401 as it is a regionfarther from the light emitting device 100 in the first direction. Theexit surface 540 may extract the light reflected by the reflectivemember 410 or the light emitted from the light emitting device 100 in anupward direction. The exit surface 540 may be disposed to be adjacent tothe substrate 401 as it is a region farther from the light emittingdevice 100, and thus a difference in amount of emitted light may bereduced according to the emitting region. Accordingly, the uniformity ofthe light extracted via the exit surface 540 may be improved.

When the light emitted from the light emitting device 100 or the lightreflected by the reflective member 410 is incident, the light extractionstructure of the light exit surface 540 may change a critical angle oflight to extract the light to an outside. The light emitted in the Zdirection via such an exit surface 540 may be a surface light source. Inthe light extraction structure of the exit surface 540, a sidecross-section may include at least one or two or more of a hemisphericalshape, a polygonal shape, or a shape such as a polygonal horn or a cone.In the light extraction structure, a side cross-section may include agroove having a hemispherical shape. In the light extraction structure,a length in the X direction, for example, a length of the hemisphericalgroove may be the same as a length in the X direction of the resinmember 550. In the light extraction structure, a concave portion and aconvex portion may be disposed to be alternately repeated, and theconcave portion or the convex portion may improve light exit efficiency.A length of the concave portion or the convex portion may be equal to adistance between the third and fourth side surfaces S13 and S14 of theresin member 550 or may be disposed to be long in the X direction of theresin member 550.

The light extraction structure of the resin member 550 will be describedin detail. In the light extraction structure, the light emitted via theresin member 550 may be emitted as a surface light source with a uniformlight distribution and a center luminous intensity of the resin member550 may be improved.

The exit surface 540 of the resin member 550 may include a plurality ofregions 541, 542, 543, and 544. The plurality of regions 541, 542, 543,and 544 may be disposed to divide into at least three or four or moreregions in the direction from the first side surface S11 to the secondside surface S12 of the resin member 550 and may have different lightextraction characteristics. The plurality of regions 541, 542, 543, and544 may be disposed to have different heights based on the position ofthe light emitting device 100. The plurality of regions 541, 542, 543,and 544 as light emitting regions may be disposed to have differentareas based on the position of the light emitting device 100. Thelengths (e.g., K2) in the X direction of the plurality of regions 541,542, 543, and 544 may be equal to each other, and the widths in the Ydirection may be different from each other. At least one of a pluralityof concave portions may be disposed in each of the plurality of regions541, 542, 543, and 544. The concave portion may be disposed in adirection (Y direction) of the second side surface S12 from the firstside surface S11 and have a long length in the second direction (Xdirection).

The plurality of regions 541, 542, 543, and 544 may be overlapped withat least a portion of the position of the light emitting device 100 andinclude a first region 541 adjacent to the first side surface S11, athird region 543 at a center side, a second region 542 between the firstand third regions 541 and 543, and a fourth region 544 between the thirdregion 543 and the second side surface S12.

The first region 541 may be a region where at least a portion of thefirst region 541 is overlapped with the light emitting device 100 in thevertical direction and may be a region that emits the reflected light inthe light emitted from the light emitting device 100. An area of anupper surface of the first region 541 may be smaller than that of uppersurfaces of the third and fourth regions 543 and 544. A length in the Xdirection of the first region 541 may be equal to the length K2 in the Xdirection of the resin member 550 and a width B11 in the Y direction maybe larger than a width of the light emitting device 100. The uppersurface of the first region 541 may be disposed at an angle r12 of 60degrees or less, for example, 30 to 60 degrees based on the straightline Z1 perpendicular to the emitting region 101 of the light emittingdevice 100. Such a first region 541 may be widely disposed on the lightemitting device 100 so that it is possible to disperse light travelingon the light emitting device 100.

Referring to FIG. 58, the width B11 of the first region 541 may besmaller than a width B12 of the third region 543 and greater than awidth B13 of the second region 542 in the direction from the first sidesurface S11 to the second side surface S12 of the resin member 550. Thewidth B11 in the first direction (Y direction) of the first region 541may be in a range of 1.5 mm or more, for example, 1.5 to 4 mm. When thewidth B11 of the first region 541 is smaller than the above range, adistance between the rear surface of the light emitting device 100 andthe first side surface S11 may be small so that a protection of the rearportion of the light emitting device 100 may be weak, and when the widthB11 of the first region 541 is greater than the above range, adistribution of light extracted via the first region 541 may benon-uniform.

A height of the upper surface of the first region 541 may be a distancebetween the upper surface of the first region 541 and a bottom of theresin member 550 or the upper surface of the substrate, and may begreater than a distance between the upper surface of the third region543 and the bottom of the resin member 550. The height of the uppersurface of the first region 541 may be the maximum thickness T2 of theresin member 550. The first region 541 may be disposed at the aboveheight to protect an upper portion of the light emitting device 100 andto extract light reflected from the second region 542 or a substratedirection.

The first region 541 may include a first concave portion I1 and a firstconvex portion J1 at an upper portion thereof. The first concave portionI1 may be disposed to be adjacent to the first convex portion J1 orbetween a plurality of first convex portions J1. In the first region541, the first concave portion I1 may be disposed in one or plural. Thefirst concave portion I1 may include a shape of a concave curvedsurface, such as a hemispherical shape, or an aspherical shape. Thefirst concave portion I1 may include a cylindrical shape having aconcave curved surface. The first concave portion I1 may have a concavecurved surface so that light L1 (see FIG. 61) reflected by the secondregion 542 or light transmitted from the substrate direction may berefracted and extracted. The first concave portion I1 may induce lightextraction in the upper and rear regions of the light emitting device100 to suppress occurrence of dark portions on the first region 541.

A plurality of first concave portions I1 disposed in the first region541 may have a concave structure from an upper surface of the firstconvex portion J1 and may be arranged in parallel with each other in thesecond direction. A length in the first direction of the first concaveportion I1 may be equal to the length K2 of the resin member 550 in theX direction. A depth Z2 of the first concave portion I1 may be smallerthan a width of the first concave portion I1. The depth Z2 of the firstconcave portion I1 is the maximum depth and may be in a range of ½ orless, for example, ½ to ¼ of a width W1 in the first direction or the Ydirection. The width W1 or diameter of the first concave portion I1 maybe an upper width of the first concave portion I1 and may be in a rangeof 2 mm or less, for example, 0.4 to 2 mm. The depth Z2 of the firstconcave portion I1 may be in a range of 1 mm or less, for example, 0.2to 1 mm or 0.2 to 0.5 mm. The width W1 of the first concave portion I1is larger than the depth Z2 of the first concave portion I1 so that theextraction efficiency of the incident light may be improved and thelight may be dispersed. Accordingly, it is possible to reduce occurrenceof dark portions on the first region 541. As another example, theplurality of first concave portions I1 disposed in the first region 541may be disposed in a long length along the first direction and may bedisposed to be concave or convex with respect to a third direction.

The upper surface of the plurality of first convex portions J1 disposedin the first region 541 may be the upper surface of the first region 541and the area thereof may be smaller than a surface area of the firstconcave portion I1. The first convex portion J1 may function as a ribfor supporting the adjacent first concave portion I1 or connecting theneighboring first concave portion I1. A width W2 of the first convexportion J1 in the first direction may be smaller than the width W1 orthe diameter of the first concave portion I1. It may be smaller than ½of the width W2 or the radius of the first convex portion J1. The widthW2 of the first convex portion J1 may be smaller than the depth Z2 ofthe first concave portion I1 and may be in a range of 0.5 mm or less,for example, 0.1 to 0.3 mm. The length of the first convex portion J1 inthe second direction or the X direction may be the same as the length ofthe first concave portion I1.

Here, the first convex portion J1 may be connected to the first sidesurface S11 and the first concave portion I1 may be spaced apart fromthe first side surface S11. As another example, a part of the firstconcave portion I1 may be connected to the first side surface S11, butis not limited thereto. As another example, the first region 541 may bedisposed to have a gradually lower height or a narrower distance as itis adjacent to the first side surface S11. This may reduce loss of lightin the rear direction of the light emitting device 100 and suppressoccurrence of dark portions.

The third region 543 may be disposed at a center side of the resinmember 550 so as to control the light distribution and maximize lightextraction efficiency with respect to a center region of the resinmember 550. The third region 543 may be disposed between the firstregion 541 and the fourth region 544. The third region 543 may bedisposed between the second region 542 and the fourth region 544.

The width B12 in the second direction of the third region 543 is largerthan the width B11 of the first region 541 and, for example, may bedisposed in a range of equal to or more than twice, for example, two tothree times the width B11 of the first region 541. The width B12 of thethird region 543 may be in a range of 6 mm or less, for example, 3 to 6mm. An area of the upper surface of such a third region 543 may belarger than that of the upper surface of the first region 541.

As shown in FIGS. 58 and 59, an upper surface height T4 of the thirdregion 543 may be disposed to be lower than a height of the uppersurface of the first region 541 from the upper surface of the substrate401 or the bottom of the resin member 550. A height of the upper surfaceof the third region 543 may be a distance between the upper surface ofthe third region 543 and the bottom of the resin member 550. The heightof the upper surface of the third region 543 may be greater than aminimum height of the fourth region 544 or greater than the thickness T3thereof. The upper surface height T4 of the third region 543 may be in arange of more than one time and less than three times the thickness T1of the light emitting device 100. The third region 543 may have arelationship of T2>T4>T3 with respect to the upper surface height T4,and may be in a range of 2.5 mm or more, for example, 2.5 to 3.5 mm.

The third region 543 may include a third concave portion I3 and a thirdconvex portion J3 at an upper portion. A plurality of the third concaveportions I3 may be arranged in the Y direction. The plurality of thirdconcave portion I3 may be arranged at a predetermined distance Pa or maybe arranged at a narrower distance as it is farther from the lightemitting device 100. Each of the third concave portions I3 may bedisposed between the third convex portions J3. A shape of the thirdconcave portion I3 may include a shape having a concave curved surface,such as a hemispherical shape, or an aspherical shape. The third concaveportion I3 may include a cylindrical shape having a concave curvedsurface. The plurality of third concave portion I3 may be arrangedparallel to each other and may have a concave shape in the substratedirection. The lengths of the third concave portion I3 and the thirdconvex portion J3 may be equal to the length of the resin member 550 inthe X direction. As another example, the third convex portion J3 and thethird concave portion I3 may be disposed to have a long length in thefirst direction and a concave or convex curved shape with respect to theZ direction.

Referring to FIG. 59, a depth Z3 of the third concave portion I3 may beequal to the depth Z2 of the first concave portion I1 in the thirddirection. The depth Z3 of the third concave portion I3 may be smallerthan a width W3 or the diameter of the third concave portion 13. Thedepth Z3 of the third concave portion I3 as a maximum depth may be in arange of ½ or less, for example, ½ to ¼ of the width W3 in the Ydirection. The width W3 or diameter of the third concave portion I3 maybe greater than the depth Z3 of the third concave portion I3 and may beequal to the width W1 of the first concave portion I1. The width W3 ordiameter of the third concave portion I3 may be an upper width or adistance between the third convex portions J3 and may be in a range of 2mm or less, for example, 0.4 to 2 mm. The depth Z3 of the third concaveportion I3 may be in a range of 1 mm or less, for example, 0.2 to 1 mmor 0.2 to 0.5 mm. A width W4 of the third convex portion J3 as a widthof an upper surface may be equal to or narrower than the width W3 of thefirst convex portion J1 and may be in a range of 0.5 mm or less, forexample, 0.1 to 0.3 mm. The third concave portions I3 may be disposed tohave a concave curved surface in the Y direction so that some ofincident light L3 (see FIG. 61) may be refracted and transmitted orreflected in a direction of the fourth region 544.

The number of the third concave portions I3 in the third region 543 maybe greater than the number of the first concave portions I1 in the firstregion 541 and, for example, may be twice or more. Such a third region543 may control a light distribution in the center side region of theresin member 540.

The upper surface of the third convex portion J3 adjacent to the fourthregion 544 in the third region 543 may be disposed at a height equal toor higher than the upper surface of the third convex portion J3 adjacentto the second region 542. In the third region 543, the upper surface ofone or a plurality of third convex portions J3 adjacent to the secondregion 542 or a height of the upper surface or uppermost end of theconvex portion whose height of the uppermost end is the lowest may belower than the upper surface of one or a plurality of third convexportions J3 adjacent to the fourth region 544 or a height of the uppersurface or uppermost end of the convex portion whose height of theuppermost end is the highest. In the third region 543, a height of theupper surface of the third convex portion J3 may be continuouslyincreased, or gradually or step-wise increased in the second directionto the fourth region 544 from the second region 542. In the third region543, a distance or a distance between the uppermost end of the thirdconvex portion J3 closest to the second region 542 and the substrate 401may be smaller than a distance or a distance between the uppermost endof the third convex portion J3 closest to the fourth region 544 and thesubstrate 401. As shown in FIG. 58, a virtual straight line connectingopposite ends in the second direction of the third region 543 may bedisposed to be gradually spaced apart from a horizontal straight line orinclined at a predetermined angle r0. The angle r0 may include a rangeof 0.01 to 20 degrees or 0.1 to 5 degrees. Even though the height of theupper surface of the third convex portion J3 adjacent to the fourthregion 544 is gradually increased due to directivity characteristics ofthe light emitted from the light emitting device 100, the lightextraction characteristics may be further improved. That is, the thirdregion 543 may gradually become higher as it is farther from the lightemitting device 100.

As shown in FIGS. 58 and 59, the second region 542 may be an exit regionand a reflective region. The second region 542 may be a region disposedadjacent to the light emitting device 100 to suppress generation of darkportions. The second region 542 may be a region that is not verticallyoverlapped with the light emitting device 100 and may be a regionclosest to the emitting region 101 of the light emitting device 100.

The width B13 of the second region 542 may be smaller than the width B11of the first region 541 in the Y direction. The width B13 may be 2 mm orless. The second region 542 may be disposed in an angle r11 in a rangeof 45 degrees or less from the straight line Z1 perpendicular to acenter of the emitting region 101 of the light emitting device 100. Sucha second region 542 may reflect the light incident in a range of 45degrees or less from the straight line Z1 perpendicular to the center ofthe emitting region 101 of the light emitting device 100 toward thefirst region 541 or the substrate. Accordingly, it is possible toprevent hot spots in the second region 542, that is, the region adjacentto the emitting region 101 of the light emitting device 100.

An upper surface of the second region 542 may include an inclined uppersurface with respect to a horizontal straight line of the upper surfaceof the first region 541 or the third region 543. The inclined uppersurface of the second region 542 may be inclined and lower than theupper surface of the second region 542 so that it is possible to preventa shape of the light emitting device 100 located inside the resin member550 from being seen when viewed from above the resin member 550. Theupper surface of the second region 542 may have a higher portionadjacent to the first region 541 and a lower portion adjacent to thethird region 543. The second region 542 may reflect some of the lightemitted from the light emitting device 100 to the first region 541 ormay reflect the light in a direction of the upper surface of thesubstrate.

Referring to FIG. 59, the second region 542 may include at least onesecond concave portion I2 recessed from the inclined upper surface. Thesecond concave portion I2 may be disposed to be adjacent to a secondconvex portion J2 or between the second convex portions J2. A straightline extending horizontally at an upper surface of the second convexportion J2 may be disposed at an angle r13 of more than 90 degrees, forexample an obtuse angle with respect to the horizontal straight line ofthe first convex portion J1 of the first region 541. A straight lineextending from the upper surface of the second convex portion J2 may bedisposed at an angle r13 of 120 degrees or more, for example, 120 to 160degrees with respect to a straight line horizontal to the upper surfaceof the first convex portion J1. That is, the upper surface of the secondregion 542 may be disposed at an angle r13 in a range of 120 degrees ormore, for example, 120 to 160 degrees from the upper surface of thefirst region 541. A virtual straight line connecting the uppermost endsof at least two of the second convex portions J2 may be inclined in thesecond region 542.

The second concave portion I2 of the second region 542 may include ashape having a concave curved surface, and may include, for example, ahemispherical shape, or an aspherical shape. The second concave portionI2 may include a cylindrical shape having a concave curved surface. Thesecond concave portion I2 may be disposed to be in a number less than orequal to the number of the first concave portions I1, for example, maybe disposed in a number smaller than that of the first concave portionsI1. A length in the X direction of the second concave portion I2 may beequal to those of the first and third concave portions I1 and I3.

When a side cross-section of the second concave portion I2 has ahemispherical shape, an angle between a normal line perpendicular to thestraight line passing the low point of the second concave portion I2 anda normal line perpendicular to a straight line passing the low point ofthe first concave portion I1 may be an acute angle. The center or normalline vector direction of the second concave portion I2 may be recessedtoward the emitting region 101 of the light emitting device 100 so thatthe light L1 and L2 (see FIG. 61) emitted from the light emitting device100 may be diffused or reflected, and thus hot spots on the third region143 may be prevented.

As shown in FIG. 59, a width W5 in the second direction of the secondconcave portion I2, which is an upper width, may be equal to the widthsW1 and W5 of the first and second concave portions I1 and I2, or 2 mm orless, for example, in a range of 0.4 to 2 mm. A depth Z4 in the thirddirection of the second concave portion I2 may be smaller than the widthW5 of the second concave portion I2. The depth Z4 of the second concaveportion I2 as a maximum depth may be in a range of ½ or less, forexample, ½ to ¼ of the width W5 of the second concave portion I2. Thedepth Z4 of the second concave portion I2 may be in a range of 1 mm orless, for example, 0.2 to 0.1 mm. The width W5 of the second concaveportion I2 may be disposed to be larger than the depth Z4 of the secondconcave portion I2, so that it is possible to increase the reflectionefficiency of the incident light, to disperse the light and to preventhot spots.

A width W6 of the second convex portion J2 may be smaller than the widthW5 or the diameter of the second concave portion I2. The width W6 of thesecond convex portion J2 may be smaller than the depth Z4 of the secondconcave portion I2 and, for example, may be in a range of 0.1 to 0.3 mm.A length in the X direction of the second convex portion J2 may be thesame as that of the second concave portion I2.

A low point Pi of the second region 542 may be disposed to be lower thanthat of the third concave portion I3. A low point depth Z7 of the secondconvex portion J2 adjacent to the third region 543 in the second region542 may be a depth from the upper surface of the third convex portion J3and may be larger than the depth Z3 of the third concave portion I3 ofthe third region 543. Accordingly, the second convex portion J2 locatedat a lower portion of the second region 542 may cover the directirradiation of light to the third convex portion J3 of the third region543 closest to the second convex portion J2. The second region 542 maybe disposed such that a boundary portion thereof with the third region543 is inclined at a predetermined angle r14 with a single step ormultiple steps with respect to the upper surface of the second convexportion J2. An inclined surface J21 with multiple steps at the boundarybetween the second and third regions 542 and 543 may be disposed at anangle r14 in a range of 120 degrees or more, for example, 120 to 150degrees with respect to the upper surface of the second region 542. Suchan inclined surface J21 with multiple steps may cover a first secondconvex portion J2 of the third region 543 adjacent to the second region542 to prevent hot spots at the portion.

Referring to FIGS. 58 and 60, the fourth region 544 of the exit surface540 may be the farthest from the light emitting device 100. The fourthregion 544 of the exit surface 540 may be disposed to be lower than theheight of the upper surface of the third region 543. The upper surfaceof the fourth region 544 of the exit surface 540 may be disposed betweenthe upper surface of the third region 543 and the second side surfaceS12 of the resin member 550. A height of the upper surface of the fourthregion 544 adjacent to the third region 543 may be high and that of theupper surface of the fourth region 544 adjacent to the second sidesurface S12 may be low. The upper surface of the fourth region 544 mayhave a height gradually lower as it is adjacent to the second sidesurface S12 of the resin member 550. The fourth region 544 may have astructure of a plurality of steps from the third region 543 and bedisposed at a height gradually lowered. The upper surface of the fourthregion 544 may be disposed at a height gradually lowered so that lightL4 (see FIG. 61) incident from the light emitting device 100 may berefracted to be transmitted or scattered.

A width B14 of the fourth region 544 may be greater than the width B12of the third region 543. The width B14 of the fourth region 544 may bein a range of 50% or less, for example, 30% to 50% of the length K1 inthe Y direction of the resin member 550. The upper surface of such afourth region 544 may have a height gradually lowered as it is fartherfrom the light emitting device 100 in the resin member 550 and may bedisposed in a range of 30% to 50% of the Y-axis length K1 of the resinmember 550 so that the light may be scattered in the farthest regionfrom the light emitting device 100 to provide a uniform distribution,and light loss may be reduced. In addition, since the distance betweenthe upper surface of the fourth region 544 and the upper surface of thesubstrate 401 may be gradually narrower as it is farther from the lightemitting device 100, it is possible to increase the utilization andextraction efficiency of light reflected via the upper surface of thesubstrate 401 or the reflective member 410.

Referring to FIG. 60, the upper surface of the fourth region 544 mayinclude an inclined surface. An angle r15 between an extending straightline of the inclined surface of the fourth region 544 and a horizontalstraight line at the upper surface of the third region 543 may be anobtuse angle. The angle r15 may be in a range of 140 degrees or more,for example, 140 to 170 degrees, when the angle r15 is smaller than therange, a distribution of light emitted to the fourth region 544 becomesnon-uniform, the reflection efficiency of the light may be lowered, andwhen the angle r15 is larger than the above range, luminous intensityemitted via the fourth region 544 may be lowered.

The fourth region 544 may include a plurality of fourth concave portionsI4 and a plurality of fourth convex portions J4. The plurality of fourthconcave portions I4 may be disposed at a height different from eachother. The plurality of fourth concave portions I4 may be disposed at aheight gradually lower as they are farther from the light emittingdevice 100, so that incident light may be transmitted and reflected. Thefourth concave portions I4 may be disposed parallel to each other at aheight different from each other. As another example, the fourth convexportion J4 and the fourth concave portion I4 may be disposed to have along length in the first direction and a concave or convex curved shapewith respect to the second direction.

As shown in FIG. 58, the plurality of fourth concave portions I4 may bedisposed at a predetermined distance Pb, and for example, may have arelationship of, for example, Pb>Pa, which is wider than the distance Paof the third concave portions I3. The normal line direction of thefourth concave portion I4 may be a direction perpendicular to the uppersurface of the substrate 401. The number of the fourth concave portionsI4 in the fourth region 544 may be greater than that of the firstconcave portions I1 in the first region 541, and may be equal to orgreater than that of the third concave portions I3 in the third region543.

The fourth concave portion I4 of the fourth region 544 may include ashape having a concave curved surface, and may include, for example, ahemispherical shape, or an aspherical shape. The fourth concave portionI4 may include a cylindrical shape having a concave curved surface. Thefourth concave portions I4 may protrude to the substrate.

When the fourth concave portion I4 has a hemispherical shape, the normallines passing the center of each of the fourth concave portions I4 maybe parallel to each other. The fourth concave portions I4 may protrudeto the substrate so that some of light L4 (see FIG. 8) emitted from thelight emitting device 100 may be refracted to pass through, and some ofthe light may be reflected. Accordingly, the fourth concave portions I4may be disposed at a height gradually lowered at a predetermineddistance, and the light incident from the light emitting device 100 andthe light reflected by the third concave portion I3 of the second region542 may be processed, respectively.

A length of the fourth concave portion I4 may be equal to lengths in thefirst direction of the first to third concave portions I1, I2, and I3. Awidth W7 of the fourth concave portion I4 may be equal to the widths W1,W3, and W5 of the first to third concave portions I1, I2, and I3 or maybe in a range of 2 mm or less, for example, 0.4 to 2 mm in the seconddirection. A depth Z5 of the fourth concave portion I4 in the thirddirection may be smaller than the width of the fourth concave portionI4. The depth Z5 of the fourth concave portion I4 as a maximum depth maybe ½ or less, for example, in a range of ½ to ¼ of the width W7 of thefourth concave portion I4. The depth Z5 of the fourth concave portion I4may be 1 mm or less, for example, in a range of 0.2 to 1 mm. In thefourth concave portion I4, since the width W7 may be disposed to belarger than the depth Z5 and to be gradually lowered, the incident lightmay be transmitted or scattered. Further, the fourth convex portion J4having a inclined surface gradually lowered and the fourth concaveportion I4 having a concave curved surface may be disposed, so that thelight reflected from the third region 543 or the light coming from thesubstrate direction may be refracted and transmitted in the upwarddirection, and the height may be gradually decreased as toward thesecond side surface S12, and thus a difference in luminous intensity ofthe extracted light can be reduced.

A width W8 of the fourth convex portion J4 in the second direction maybe smaller than the width W7 or the diameter of the fourth concaveportion I4. The width W8 of the fourth convex portion J4 may be smallerthan the depth Z5 of the fourth concave portion I4 and may be in a rangeof, for example, 0.1 to 0.2 mm. A length of the fourth convex portion J4may be the same as the length of the fourth concave portion I4 in the Xdirection.

As shown in FIG. 60, the fourth convex portion J4 may include astructure of a plurality of steps and, for example, may include a firstsurface J41, a second surface J42, and a third surface J43. The firstsurface J41 may be a flat surface, the second surface J42 may be aninclined surface, and the third surface J43 may be a flat surface. Thesecond surface J42 may be connected between the first and third surfacesJ41 and J43. The second surface J42 may include an inclined surfacehaving a height gradually lowered as it is adjacent to the third surfaceJ43 or farther from the light emitting device 100. The first and thirdsurfaces J41 and J43 may have different heights at the fourth convexportion J4 disposed between the adjacent fourth concave portions I4, andfor example, the third surface J43 may be disposed to be lower than thefirst surface J41. A height difference Z6 between the first and thirdsurfaces J41 and J43 may be smaller than the depth Z5 of the fourthconcave portion I4 and, for example, may be in a range of 0.5 mm orless, for example, 0.15 to 0.5 mm. When the height difference Z6 betweenthe first and third surfaces J41 and J43 is large, it may be disposed tobe lower than the low point of the fourth convex portion J4 in thehorizontal direction, and accordingly, an amount in which some of thelight emitted from the light emitting device 100 is directly transmittedvia the fourth convex portion J4 (J41, J42, and J43) is increased, whichmay lower the uniform distribution of light.

A width W11 of the second surface J42 of the fourth convex portion J4may be larger than widths W9 and W10 of the first and third surfaces J41and J43, and may be twice or more. Accordingly, the light reflected inthe substrate direction may be extracted via the second surface J42.

Here, the first surface J41 or the second surface J42 may be disposed ata portion of the fourth convex portion J4 adjacent to the third region543, but is not limited thereto. The first surface J41 or the first andsecond surfaces J41 and J42 may be disposed at a portion of the fourthconvex portion J4 adjacent to the second side surface S12.

The recessed direction of the second concave portion I2 of the secondregion 542 at the exit surface 540 of the resin member 550 according toan embodiment may be made different from the depressed direction of theconcave portions I1, I3, and I4 of the first, third and fourth regions541, 543, 544, so that a critical angle with respect to the incidentlight may be changed, and thus hot spots can be prevented.

As shown in FIG. 61, the light L1, L2, L3 and L4 emitted from the lightemitting device 100 in the resin member 550 may be irradiated toward theresin member 550 of the substrate direction, an upper portion of theexit surface 540 of the resin member 550, for example, second to thefourth regions 542, 543, and 544. In this case, the light traveling inthe substrate direction may be reflected by the reflective member 410and may travel to the first to fourth regions 541, 542, 543, and 544.The light L3 irradiated to the third region 543 or the light reflectedby the reflective member 410 may be transmitted to the third region 543or reflected in the direction of the first region 541 or in thesubstrate direction. The light L1 or L2 irradiated to the second region542 or the light reflected by the reflective member 410 may betransmitted or reflected in the direction of the first region 541 or inthe substrate direction. The light L4 traveling to the fourth region 544or reflected by the reflective member 410 may be transmitted by thefourth region 544 or reflected in the substrate direction. The resinmember 550 has an effect of improving uniformity and luminous intensityof light extracted by the first to fourth regions 541, 542, 543, and544.

FIG. 62 is a modified example of the lighting module of FIG. 55, inwhich a reflective member having a film between the substrate 401 andthe resin member 550 is removed. In this case, the substrate 401 mayhave a reflective layer 401B disposed on a support layer 401A. Thereflective layer 401B may include a member having a solder resistmaterial, and the solder resist material is a white material, and mayreflect incident light. The thickness of the lighting module may bereduced by removing the reflective member, so that the manufacturingprocess may be simplified. The reflective layer 401B may be a singlelayer. As shown in FIG. 96, Example 1 is a case in which a film having amultilayer structure such as a reflective member is applied to alighting module as shown in FIG. 55, and Example 2 is a case in which afilm such as a reflective member is removed and a reflective layer isdisposed as shown in FIG. 62. As in Examples 1 and 2 of FIG. 96, it canbe seen that the illumination characteristic at the angle of ±10 degreesor less with respect to the vertical straight line is higher in thestructure as in Example 2.

FIG. 63 is a first modified example of the lighting module of FIG. 54.In describing the first modified example, an exit surface of a resinmember of the lighting module is referred to examples disclosed above,and may be selectively applied to the first modified example.

Referring to FIG. 63, the lighting module includes a substrate 401, aplurality of light emitting devices 100 arranged in the X directionalong a first edge of the substrate 401, and a resin member 550 havingan exit surface 540 on the substrate 401 and the light emitting device100.

The light emitting devices 100 may be arranged at a predetermineddistance along the X direction at a first edge in a longitudinaldirection of the substrate 401. The light emitting device 100 may bearranged along at least one edge, that is, a long side edge, of thesubstrate 401. The light emitting devices 100 may be arranged at apredetermined distance. The light emitting device 100 may be arrangedalong a thick region of the region of the resin member 550. A thicknessof the resin member 550 may be thicker in the region in which the lightemitting device 100 is disposed and thinner as it is farther from thelight emitting device 100.

As shown in FIGS. 3 to 7, the exit surface 540 of the resin member 550may include first to fourth regions in the Y direction. Theconfiguration and description of the first to fourth regions arereferred to the description of the above-disclosed embodiments.

A length Y2 in the first direction of the resin member 550 may begreater than a length X2 in the X direction and may be, for example,twice or more. A distance B5 between the light emitting devices 100 maybe in a range of 100 mm or less, for example, in a range of 1 to 30 mmor 15 to 25 mm. When the distance B5 between the light emitting devices100 is smaller than the above range, the number of the light emittingdevices 100 may be increased, and when the distance B5 is larger thanthe above range, dark portions may be generated.

A reflective member 410 having a reflective member may be disposedbetween the resin member 550 and the substrate 401. As another example,the reflective member is not a film, a reflective layer such as a solderresist formed on the circuit board 401 may be disposed as the reflectivemember. Although a shape of the resin member 550 or the substrate ispresented as an example of a polygon when viewed from the top, it may bea shape having a curved line.

FIG. 64 is a second modified example of the lighting module according toan embodiment. In describing the second modified example, an exitsurface of a resin member of the lighting module is referred to examplesdisclosed above, and may be selectively applied to the second modifiedexample.

Referring to FIG. 64, a plurality of light emitting cells 550C and 550Dmay be disposed in n rows and m columns in the lighting module, and thecondition of n>1 and m>1 may be satisfied. The light emitting cells 550Cof the n rows and the light emitting cells 550D of the m rows may bedisposed to be intersecting, corresponding to, or adjacent to eachother. For example, the plurality of first light emitting cells 550C maybe arranged in the X direction on the substrate 401, and one or moresecond light emitting cells 550D may be disposed in the Y direction. Thefirst and second light emitting cells 550C and 550D may be disposed tobe overlapped with each other in the X direction or the Y direction. Theresin member disclosed in the lighting module of FIG. 64 may include theabove-disclosed first to fourth regions, respectively.

Referring to FIG. 65, a lighting module may have a curved edge on thesubstrate 401, and a plurality of light emitting cells 550E may bearranged on the substrate 401. The plurality of light emitting cells550E may be formed in a curved shape along the curved edge. That is,third and fourth side surfaces S13 and S14 of the resin member 550 ofeach light emitting cell 550E are formed in a curved shape, and in eachlight emitting cell 550E, the central axes of the light emitting devicesmay be disposed on different axes. This may be applied to a curved orbent lamp structure depending on the type of application being applied.The resin member 550 disclosed in the lighting module of FIG. 65 mayinclude the above-disclosed first to fourth regions, respectively.

The reflective member 410 according to an embodiment is referred to thestructure and description of the above-disclosed embodiment(s).

FIG. 66 is a view showing a lighting device having the lighting moduleof FIG. 55. The lighting module in the lighting device of FIG. 66 willbe described with reference to the configuration and description of thelighting module described above.

As shown in FIG. 66, the lighting module 500 includes the moduledisclosed in the embodiment, and includes a substrate 401, a pluralityof light emitting devices 100 on the substrate 401, and a resin member550 and a reflective member 410. A plurality of resin members 550 may bedisposed on the substrate 401. As shown in FIGS. 54 and 55, the lightingmodule 500 may be arranged with a plurality of light emitting cells550A. The lighting module 500 may include the reflective member 410 inthe form of a film or may include a reflecting member made of a solderresist material on the substrate.

An optical member 230 may be disposed on the lighting module 500, andthe optical member 230 may diffuse and transmit incident light. Theoptical member 230 uniformly diffuses and emits the surface light sourceemitted through the resin member 550. The optical member 230 may includean optical lens or an inner lens, and the optical lens may condense thelight toward the target or change the path of the light. The opticalmember 230 may include a plurality of lens portions 231 on at least oneof the upper surface and the lower surface of the optical member 230,and the lens portions 231 may have a shape protruding downward from theoptical member 230 or may have a shape protruding upward from theoptical member 230. Such an optical member 230 may control the lightdistribution characteristics of the lighting device.

The lighting module 500 may include a heat dissipation plate (not shown)at a bottom surface thereof. The heat dissipation plate may include aplurality of heat dissipation fins and may dissipate heat conducted tothe substrate 401. The heat dissipation plate may include at least oneof metals such as aluminum, copper, magnesium, nickel, or an alloythereof.

The lighting device includes a housing 300 having a receiving space 305,a lighting module according to an embodiment disposed at the bottom ofthe receiving space of the housing 300, and an optical member 230disposed on the lighting module.

The housing 300 includes a bottom portion 301 and a reflective portion302. The bottom portion 301 is disposed under the substrate 401. Thereflective portion 302 may protrude upward from an outer periphery ofthe bottom portion 301 and may be disposed around the resin member 550.The housing 300 may include a metal or a plastic material, but theinvention is not limited thereto. The lighting device includes a housing300 having a receiving space 305, a lighting module according to anembodiment disposed at the bottom of the receiving space of the housing300, and an optical member 230 disposed on the lighting module. An outersurface of the receiving space 305 of the housing 300 may be provided atan inclined surface with respect to the bottom surface of the housing300 and the inclined surface may improve the light extractionefficiency. The surface of the receiving space 305 of the housing 300may be formed with a metallic material of reflective material and thelight extraction efficiency in the receiving space 305 may be improvedby such metallic material. The depth of the receiving space 305 islarger than the high point of the resin member 550 and may emit lightemitted through the resin member 550.

Sixth Embodiment

FIG. 67 is a perspective view of a lighting module according to a sixthembodiment, FIG. 68 is a partial plan view of the lighting module ofFIG. 67, FIG. 69 is a side cross-sectional view of the lighting moduleof FIG. 68, FIG. 70 is a partial enlarged view of the lighting module ofFIG. 69, and FIG. 71 is a view for explaining a second region in thelighting module of FIG. 69. A description of the sixth embodiment isreferred to a description of the embodiment(s) disclosed above, and thesame configuration may be selectively applied to the present embodiment.

Referring to FIGS. 67 to 71, a lighting module 600 according to thesixth embodiment may include a substrate 401, a light emitting device100 disposed on the substrate 401, and a resin member 650 covering thelight emitting device 100 on the substrate 401.

The lighting module 600 may emit light emitted from the light emittingdevice 100 as a surface light source. One or a plurality of lightemitting cells 650A may be arranged in the lighting module 600. Thelight emitting cells 650A may emit light of the same color by the lightemitting device 100. The plurality of light emitting devices 100 mayemit light of a single color. The plurality of light emitting cells 650Amay be arranged on the substrate 401 in a predetermined direction. Adescription of each component and operation of the lighting moduleaccording to the sixth embodiment is referred to the embodiment (s)disclosed above, and may be selectively applied to the presentembodiment.

The lighting module 600 may include a reflective member 410A thatreflects incident light toward an exit surface of the resin member 650.The reflective member 410A may be in a film shape as shown in FIG. 7 or8, or may be a reflective layer. The reflective layer may be disposed asa layer of resin material or solder resist material without beingattached in a separate film shape on the substrate 401. Such areflective member 410A may be implemented as a reflective layer disposedon a surface of the substrate 401, which is not a film-shaped reflectivemember as shown in FIGS. 7 and 8. In a case of removing such afilm-shaped reflective member, it is possible to reduce a thickness ofthe lighting module and eliminate a problem of thermal expansion orpeeling off due to adhesion of a film.

The resin member 650 may be disposed on the substrate 401. Since theresin member 650 is disposed on the light emitting device 100, the lightemitting device 100 may be protected and loss of light emitted from thelight emitting device 100 may be reduced. The resin member 650 mayprevent moisture penetration by sealing a surface of the light emittingdevice 100. When the number of the resin members 650 is plural as shownin FIG. 68, the resin member 650 of each of the light emitting cells650A may be spaced apart from each other. The plurality of resin members650 may be arranged in one direction. The plurality of resin members 650may be spaced apart at a predetermined distance or may be disposed at anirregular distance. A gap between the resin members 650 may face twoside surfaces S11 and S12 of different resin members. The adjacent resinmembers 650 may be separated from or connected to each other. When theresin members 650 are connected to each other, they may be partiallyconnected.

The resin member 650 may include first and second side surfaces S11 andS12 opposite to each other and third and fourth side surfaces S13 andS14 opposite to each other. The first side surface S11 may be adjacentto the light emitting device 100, and may be face a rear surface of thelight emitting device 100. The first side surface S11 may be an oppositesurface of an emitting region 101 of the light emitting device 100. Thesecond side surface S12 is a surface facing the first side surface S11,and may face the emitting region 101 of the light emitting device 100.The third and fourth side surfaces S13 and S14 may be adjacent to thefirst and second side surfaces S11 and S12, and may face each other. Athickness of the resin member 650 may vary depending on a region. Athickness T2 of the thickest region in the Z direction in the resinmember 650 may be thicker than a thickness T1 of the light emittingdevice 100, and a thickness T3 of the thinnest region may be smaller orthicker than the thickness T1 of the light emitting device 100. Thethickest region of the resin member 650 may be overlapped with the lightemitting device 100 in a vertical direction. A thickness of a regionadjacent to the first side surface S11 in the resin member 650 may bethicker than a thickness of a region adjacent to the second side surfaceS12 therein.

The maximum thickness T2 of the resin member 650 may be greater than orequal to the thickness T1 of the light emitting device 100, and may be20 mm or less. The maximum thickness T2 of the resin member 650 may be10 mm or less, for example, in a range of 1.7 to 10 mm, or 1.7 to 4 mm.When the maximum thickness T2 of the resin member 650 is larger than theabove range, luminous efficiency may be lowered or a module thicknessmay be increased. When the maximum thickness T2 is smaller than theabove range, light uniformity may be lowered. The minimum thickness T3of the resin member 650 may be 1 mm or more and less than the maximumthickness T2. The minimum thickness T3 may be in a range of 1 to 2 mm or1.4 to 2 mm. The minimum thickness T3 may be equal to, or greater orless than the thickness T1 of the light emitting device 100.

When viewed in a top view of the resin member 650, a length K1 in the Ydirection may be disposed equal to or larger than a length K2 in the Xdirection, as shown in FIG. 68. The length K2 in the X direction may bea length of the first and second side surfaces S11 and S12 disposed onopposite sides of the resin members 650 in the X direction. The lengthK1 in the Y direction may be 10 mm or more, for example, in a range of10 to 40 mm, or 10 to 23 mm. The length K2 in the X direction may be 10mm or more, for example, in a range of 10 to 30 mm or 15 to 23 mm. Asize of the resin member 650 may be provided in a size considering lightuniformity, and may vary depending on applications. A top view shape ofthe resin member 650 may be a polygonal shape, for example, aquadrilateral shape, a curved shape, or a bent shape.

The thinnest region of the resin member 650 may be the farthest regionwith respect to the emitting region 101 of the light emitting device100. The minimum thickness T3 of the resin member 650 may be 1 mm ormore with respect to an upper surface of the substrate 401, or equal toor greater or less than the thickness T1 of the light emitting device100. The lowest point of the resin member 650 may be higher or lowerthan a height of an upper surface of the light emitting device 100. Thelowest point of an upper surface of the resin member 650 may be smalleror higher than a height of a straight line or an optical axis Y0. Theside surfaces S11, S12, S13, and S14 of the resin member 650 may becoated with a metal material such as aluminum, chromium, and bariumsulfate, but is not limited thereto.

The resin member 650 according to an embodiment includes an exit surface640. The exit surface 640 is the upper surface of the resin member 650and may include a light extraction structure (or an optical pattern or aconcavo-convex pattern) in at least a portion of the region. The lightextraction structure may include a concavo-convex pattern, and mayreflect or transmit incident light or may change a critical angle. Thelight extraction structure may be integrally formed at the exit surface640 of the resin member 650. The resin member 650 and the lightextraction structure may be formed of the same material. The lightextraction structure may have a pattern of a predetermined distance orirregular distance. The exit surface 640 may be gradually adjacent tothe substrate 401 as it is farther from the light emitting device 100.The exit surface 640 may extract light reflected by the reflectivemember 410A or light emitted from the light emitting device 100 in anupward direction. The exit surface 640 is disposed adjacent to thesubstrate 401 as it is farther from the light emitting device 100,thereby reducing a difference in an amount of light emitted according tothe emitting region 101. Accordingly, uniformity of light extractedthrough the exit surface 640 may be improved.

In the light extraction structure of the exit surface 640, when lightemitted from the light emitting device 100, light reflected by the exitsurface 640, or light reflected by the reflective member 410A isincident, the light may be extracted to the outside by changing thecritical angle of light. Light emitted in the Z direction through theexit surface 640 may be a surface light source. In the light extractionstructure of the exit surface 640, a side cross section may include atleast one or two or more of a hemispherical shape, a polygonal shape,and a shape such as a polygonal horn or a cone. In the light extractionstructure, the side cross section may include a groove with ahemispherical shape. A length of the light extraction structure in the Xdirection may be equal to a length of the resin member 650 in the Xdirection. The light extraction structure may improve light exitefficiency by a concavo-convex pattern. The light extraction structureis disposed in the same length as that of the resin member 650 in the Xdirection, and the concavo-convex pattern may be alternately arranged inthe Y direction.

In an embodiment, the lighting module may guide light from the lightemitting device 100 through the resin member 650, and exit the lightthrough the exit surface 640, thereby providing a uniform surface lightsource. Since an optical path in the resin member 650 is long, theembodiment is directed to prevent luminous efficiency from deterioratingin a process of controlling a light emitting direction. In addition, theembodiment is directed to provide luminous efficiency and lightdistribution characteristics for various kinds of lamps applied to anobject such as a vehicle according to a material of the reflectivemember 410A.

In the lighting module, when the reflective member 410A is a film typehaving a reflective pattern, image uniformity extracted through adiffusion of light by the reflective pattern may be improved, therebyproviding a uniform surface light source. Since the reflective member410A of such a film type is low in central luminous intensity of asurface light source, it may be effective for a position lamp, a taillamp, and the like based on the law on light distribution of a vehicle.In the lighting module, when the reflective member 410A is a reflectivelayer such as a solder resist, an amount of light reflected from aregion adjacent to the emitting region 101 of the light emitting device100 is increased, thereby implementing a surface light source in whichcentral luminous intensity is increased. Since the reflective member410A having such a reflective layer provides a surface light sourcehaving a high central luminous intensity, it can be applied to a daytimerunning right, a backup lamp, a turn signal lamp, or the like.

The lighting module of an embodiment may change a pattern of the lightextraction structure at the exit surface 640 of the resin member 650 toimprove light efficiency and increase central luminous intensity, andmay provide a surface light source. Light condensing property anddiffusing property may be improved by the pattern of the lightextraction structure of the exit surface 640 of the resin member 650according to an embodiment. Hereinafter, the exit surface 640 of theresin member 650 will be described in detail. The exit surface 640 mayemit light emitted through the resin member 650 with a uniform lightdistribution as the surface light source, and may improve the centralluminous intensity of the resin member 650.

The exit surface 640 of the resin member 650 may include a plurality ofregions 641, 642, and 643. The plurality of regions 641, 642, and 643may be disposed with at least three or four regions or more divided in adirection of the second side surface S12 from the first side surface S11of the resin member 650, and may have different light extractioncharacteristics. The plurality of regions 641, 642, and 643 may bedisposed with different heights based on a position of the lightemitting device 100. The plurality of regions 641, 642, and 643 is thelight emitting region 101, and may be disposed with a different areafrom each other based on the position of the light emitting device 100.The plurality of regions 641, 642, and 643 may have the same length inthe X direction (e.g., K2), and may have different widths in the Ydirection. The light extraction structure may be disposed in at leastone or two more of the plurality of regions 641, 642, and 643.

The plurality of regions 641, 642 and 643 may include a first region 641in which at least a portion thereof is overlapped with the lightemitting device 100 in the vertical direction and is adjacent to thefirst side surface S11, a second region 642 between the first region 641and the second side surface S12, and a third region 643 between thesecond region 642 and the second side surface S12.

At least a portion of the first region 641 may be overlapped with thelight emitting device 100 in the vertical direction. The first region641 may be a region that emits the reflected light among light emittedfrom the light emitting device 100. An area of an upper surface of thefirst region 641 may be smaller than that of an upper surface of thethird region 643. A length in the X direction of the first region 641may be equal to the length K2 in the X direction of the resin member 650and a width B21 in the Y direction may be larger than a width H1 (seeFIG. 68) in the Y direction of the light emitting device 100. The firstregion 641 may be disposed at an angle of 60 degrees or less, forexample, in a range of 30 to 60 degrees with respect to a straight lineZ1 perpendicular to the emitting region 101 of the light emitting device100. Such a first region 641 may be widely disposed on the lightemitting device 100 at the above-described size, so that it is possibleto disperse light traveling toward an upper portion and rear portion ofthe light emitting device 100 to a region adjacent to the first sidesurface S11.

Referring to FIG. 69, the width B21 of the first region 641 may begreater than a width B22 of the second region 642 and smaller than awidth B23 of the third region 643 in the Y direction from the exitsurface 640 of the resin member 650. The width B21 of the first region641 may be 1.5 mm or more, for example, in a range of 1.5 to 4 mm. Whenthe width B21 of the first region 641 is smaller than the above range, adistance between the rear surface of the light emitting device 100 andthe first side surface S11 may be small, so that a protection of therear portion of the light emitting device 100 may be weak, and when thewidth B21 of the first region 641 is greater than the above range, adistribution of light extracted via the first region 641 may benon-uniform.

A height of the upper surface of the first region 641 is a distancebetween the upper surface of the first region 641 and a bottom of theresin member, and may be disposed higher than the upper surface of thesecond region 642. The height of the upper surface of the first region641 may be equal to the maximum thickness T2 of the resin member 650.The first region 641 may be disposed on the light emitting device 100 atthe above height, so that it is possible to protect an upper portion ofthe light emitting device 100 and to extract light reflected from thethird region 643 or a substrate direction.

Referring to FIGS. 70 and 71, the first region 641 may include a firstlight extraction structure F1 on an upper portion thereof at the exitsurface 640 of the resin member 650. The first light extractionstructure F1 may include a concavo-convex pattern, and a height of ahigh point of the concavo-convex pattern may be equal to each other. Thefirst light extraction structure F1 may include a pattern having a prismshape. The convex pattern may include a triangular shape having twosides inclined in a side cross section, and an internal angle m1 (seeFIG. 5) between the two sides may be 60 degrees or more. The high point(or vertex) of the convex pattern may be disposed to be adjacent in afirst side surface direction than a center of the pattern. The vertex ofthe convex pattern may be an angled surface or a curved surface. Foranother example, the light extraction structure may include a pattern ofa polygonal cone or a conical shape. For another example, a patternhaving a concave hemispherical shape may be disposed in the first region641.

The first light extraction structure F1 of the first region 641 may haveone or a plurality of patterns of a prism shape or a concavehemispherical shape. The patterns may diffuse and extract lightreflected from the second region 642 or light transmitted from thesubstrate direction. The first light extraction structure F1 of thefirst region 641 may extract light traveling to the upper and the rearregions of the light emitting device 100 to suppress an occurrence ofdark portions. For another example, the first region 641 may be disposedwith a gradually lower height or a smaller thickness as it is adjacentto the first side surface S11. Accordingly, it is possible to reduce aloss of light in the backward direction of the light emitting device 100and suppress the occurrence of dark portions.

The second region 642 on the exit surface 640 of the resin member 650may be an exit and reflective region. The second region 642 may bespaced apart from the emitting region 101 of the light emitting device100 and may be disposed closer to the light emitting device 100 than thethird region 643. The second region 642 is a region which is notoverlapped with the light emitting device 100 in the vertical direction,and may be a region closest to the emitting region 101 of the lightemitting device 100. The second region 642 may be a region forsuppressing an occurrence of hot spots at a position closest to thelight emitting device 100.

The second region 642 has a concave recess, and is disposed on theemitting region 101 of the light emitting device 100, so that some oflight traveling in the vertical direction or toward the second region642 by the reflective member 410A at a bottom portion adjacent to theemitting region 101 among the light emitted from the light emittingdevice 100, may be reflected or may be diffused to another path. Such asecond region 642 may reduce an occurrence of dark portions in thesecond region 642 and may improve luminous intensity around the secondregion 642 by reflecting, transmitting, and guiding incident light toanother path. Accordingly, it is possible to improve central luminousintensity of the exit surface 640 of the resin member 650 and preventdeterioration of light extraction efficiency.

In the second region 642, as shown in FIG. 69, the concave recess of thesecond region 642 may be disposed to be lower than a height of the firstregion 641 and may be disposed to be lower than a height of a high pointof the third region 643 base on the upper surface of the substrate 401.The second region 642 may be lower than a height of the uppermost end ofthe first region 641.

A width B22 of the second region 642 in the direction of the second sidesurface S12 from the first side surface S11 or in the Y direction of theresin member 650 may be smaller than the width B21 of the first region641. The width B22 may be 6 mm or less. The second region 642 may bedisposed at an angle r1 (see FIG. 70) in a range of 45 degrees or lessfrom the straight line Z1 perpendicular with respect to a center of theemitting region 101 of the light emitting device 100. The second region642 covers a range of 45 degrees or less from the straight line Z1perpendicular to the center of the emitting region 101 of the lightemitting device 100, and may reflect most of incident light in adirection of the first region 641 or the substrate 401 or anotherdirection. Accordingly, it is possible to prevent hot spots in thesecond region 642, that is, a region adjacent to the emitting region 101of the light emitting device 100, and to increase central luminousintensity.

Referring to FIGS. 70 and 71, the second region 642 may include a firstreflective surface G1 extended in a direction of a low point P21 of thesecond region 642 or in the direction of the substrate from the firstregion 641, and a second reflective surface G2 extended in a directionof an uppermost end of the third region 643 from the low point P21 ofthe second region 642 or the first reflective surface G1. The first andsecond reflective surfaces G1 and G2 may be disposed at a long length ina first direction or the X direction. The second reflective surface G2may be disposed at a lower height than an uppermost end of the thirdregion 643.

The first reflective surface G1 may be disposed in the verticaldirection, and may include at least one of an inclined plane, a convexsurface and a concave surface with respect to the vertical straight lineZ1. The first reflective surface G1 may have an inclined surface in adirection toward the substrate 401. The first reflective surface G1 mayhave a surface in which a lowermost end is inclined in the directiontoward the substrate 401. A straight line connecting both ends of thefirst reflective surface G1 is a line segment connecting the low pointP21 and the first region 641, and may be disposed to be inclined. Thestraight line connecting both ends of the first reflective surface G1may have a slope inclined in a direction toward the substrate 401 withrespect to an uppermost end. The straight line connecting both ends ofthe first reflective surface G1 may be disposed at an angle r2 of 30degrees or more, for example, in a range of 30 degrees to 60 degreeswith respect to a horizontal straight line based on an upper end of thefirst reflective surface G1. The first reflective surface G1 may bedisposed between the straight line Z1 perpendicular to the emittingregion 101 of the light emitting device 100 and the third region 643 orbetween the points P21 of the second region 642. The first reflectivesurface G1 may be a total reflection surface that reflects light emittedfrom the emitting region 101 of the light emitting device 100 toward thefirst region 641. The first reflective surface G1 may include a convexcurved surface that protrudes from the straight line connecting bothends of the first reflective surface G1. A curve of the convex curvedsurface may be a smooth curve passing a plurality of given controlpoints, and may include a curve having a polynomial between adjacent twoinflection points, which may be defined as a spline curve.

The second reflective surface G2 may have a surface inclined in adirection away from the substrate 401. The second reflective surface G2may have a surface inclined in the direction away from the substrate 401from the lowermost end of the first reflective surface G1. An uppermostend of the second reflective surface G2 may be inclined in the directionaway from the substrate 401 from the lowermost end of the firstreflective surface G1. A straight line connecting both ends of thesecond reflective surface G2 may have a slope inclined in the directionaway from the substrate 401 with respect to a lowermost end.

The low point P21 of the second region 642 is a boundary portion betweenthe first and second reflective surfaces G1 and G2, and may be aninflection point or a bent portion. The low point P21 of the secondregion 642 may be higher than the upper surface of the light emittingdevice 100, and may be spaced apart from a straight line horizontal tothe emitting region of the light emitting device 100 toward the secondside surface S12 by a first distance T25. The first distance T25 may be0.5 mm or more, for example, in a range of 1 to 2 mm. When the firstdistance T25 is smaller than the above range, light traveling to thefirst region 641 decreases, and a luminance deviation may occur withother regions, and when the first distance T25 is larger than the aboverange, light reflected to the first region 641 decreases, and luminancedeviation may occur with other regions.

The low point P21 of the second region 642 has a predetermined heightT24 and is a distance from the bottom of the resin member 650, and forexample, may be 2 mm or more, for example, in a range of 2 to 9 mm. Aheight (for example, T4) of the low point P21 of the second region 642may be disposed at a ratio of 0.2 to 0.9 of the maximum thickness T2 ofthe resin member 650. A straight line perpendicular to the low point P21of the second region 642 may be spaced apart from the emitting region101 of the light emitting device 100 by a second distance d2, and may be0.5 mm or more, for example, in a range of 1 to 2 mm. The low point P21of the second region 642 is spaced apart from an upper surface edge ofthe light emitting device 100 by 0.6 mm or more, and may be disposedmore adjacent to the second side surface than the emitting region 101 ofthe light emitting device 100. Here, a ratio of the first distance T25to the second distance d2 may be in a range of 1:1 to 1:2˜2:1 to 1:1,and the maximum value of the T5 and d2 may be 2 mm or less, or may beequal to or less than the thickness T1 of the light emitting device 100.

In the second region 642, the second reflective surface G2 may includeat least one of an inclined plane, a convex curved surface, and aconcave curved surface with respect to a horizontal straight line. Thesecond reflective surface G2 may include, for example, a concave curvedsurface, and may be concave in the direction of the substrate. Theconcave curved surface may have a smooth curve passing a plurality ofgiven control points, and may include a curve having a polynomial foreach section between two adjacent inflection points, which may bedefined as a spline curve. The second reflective surface G2 is concavedownward than the straight line connecting both ends of the secondreflective surface G2. The straight line connecting both ends of thesecond reflective surface G2 may be 15 degrees or more, for example, ina range of 15 degrees to 60 degrees from a horizontal straight line withrespect to an upper end of the second reflective surface G2.

A width C21 of the first reflective surface G1 may be smaller than awidth C22 of the second reflective surface G2 with respect to thestraight line perpendicular to the low point P21 of the first region641. The width C21 of the first reflective surface G1 may be smallerthan the width C22 of the second reflective surface G2. The width C21 ofthe first reflective surface G1 may be disposed in a range of 1.2 to 4times the width C22 of the second reflective surface G2. The width C21may be 0.5 mm or more, for example, in a range of 0.5 to 3 mm. The widthC22 or an area of the second reflective surface G2 is disposed morewidely, so that most of light traveling from the light emitting device100 to the second reflective surface G2 is reflected to the third region643 or toward the substrate. Accordingly, hot spots in the second region642 may be prevented, and light extraction efficiency in the thirdregion 643 may be improved.

The second region 642 is not overlapped with the light emitting device100 in the vertical direction, and is provided with the concave firstand second reflective surfaces G1 and G2, so that it is possible toprevent a shape of the light emitting device 100 from being viewed in anoblique direction through the second region 642, thereby improving anoutline.

The third region 643 of the exit surface 640 has 50% or more of theupper surface area of the resin member 650 as a light extraction region,and may diffuse incident light and provide the light as a surface lightsource. The third region 643 is disposed between the second region 642and the second side surface S12, and a width B23 in the Y direction (seeFIG. 69) may be 50% or more of the length K2 of the resin member 650 inthe Y direction, for example, in a range of 50% to 80%.

The third region 643 of the exiting surface 640 may be the farthestregion from the light emitting device 100. The height of the high pointof the third region 643 may be lower than that of the upper surface ofthe first region 641. A height of the upper surface of the third region643 may be high at a portion adjacent to the second region 642 and maybe low at a portion adjacent to the second side surface S12. The thirdregion 643 of the exit surface 640 may have a gradually lower heightfrom a boundary point with the second region 642 in the direction of thesecond side surface S12 of the resin member 650. The upper surface ofthe third region 643 may have a gradually lower height as it is closerto the second side surface S12 of the resin member 650. The third region643 may have a structure of a plurality of steps from the second region642, and may be disposed at a gradually lowered height. A distancebetween the uppermost end of the third region 643 adjacent to the secondregion 642 and the substrate may be greater than a distance between alower end adjacent to the second side surface S12 and the substrate. Adistance between an upper end of the third region 643 closest to thesecond region 642 and the substrate may be greater than a distancebetween a lower end closest to the second side surface S12 and thesubstrate. Since the upper surface of the third region 643 is disposedat a gradually lowered height, light incident from the light emittingdevice 100, light reflected from the substrate direction, and lightreflected from the second region 642 may be refracted to be transmittedor diffused.

A width B24 of the third region 643 may be greater than the width B22 ofthe second region 642. The width B24 of the third region 643 may be 50%or more of the length K1 of the resin member 650 in the Y direction, forexample, in a range of 50% to 80%. The third region 643 has a graduallylower thickness as it is farther from the light emitting device 100 ofthe resin member 650, and is disposed in a range of 50% to 80% of theY-axis length K1 of the resin member 650, so that it is possible toprovide light in a uniform distribution and to reduce loss of light byscattering the light in the farthest region from the light emittingdevice 100. A distance between the upper surface of the third region 643and the upper surface of the substrate 401 is gradually narrower as itis farther from the light emitting device 100, so that it is possible toincrease utilization and extraction efficiency of light reflected viathe upper surface of the substrate 401 or the reflective member 410A.

The upper surface of the third region 643 may include an inclinedsurface. The third region 643 may include a second light extractionstructure F3. The second light extraction structure F3 may include aconcave-convex pattern, and the second light extraction structure F3 mayinclude a prism-shaped pattern. The prism-shaped pattern may have aconcave pattern between convex patterns, and the convex pattern (e.g.,mountain structure) may include a triangular shape in a side crosssection. The convex pattern may have an internal angle of two sides m2(see in FIG. 71) of 60 degrees or more. The mountain structures may havea long length in the X direction, for example, the same length as thelength in the X direction of the resin member 650. The high point (orvertex) of the convex pattern may be disposed adjacent to a center ofthe pattern in the second side surface direction. The vertex of theconvex pattern may be an angled surface or a curved surface. As anotherexample, the light extraction structure may include a pattern of apolygonal cone or a conical shape. As another example, a pattern havinga concave hemispherical shape may be disposed in the third region 643.

The convex patterns of a second light extraction structure F3 may bearranged in the same shape and at a predetermined distance. The distanceof the convex patterns of the second light extraction structure F3 maybe wider than the distance of the convex patterns of the first lightextraction structure F1. As shown in FIG. 70, a straight line connectinghigh points of the convex patterns of the second light extractionstructure F3 may have a predetermined angle r4 with respect to ahorizontal straight line. The angle r4 may be 1 degree or more, forexample, in a range of 1 degree to 45 degrees.

The third region 643 may have a larger area than a sum of areas of thefirst and second regions 641 and 642, and may exit light directlytransmitted from the light emitting device 100 and indirectlytransmitted through another path. Accordingly, light extracted throughthe third region 643 having the second light extraction structure F3 ofthe predetermined pattern may have a uniform luminance distribution.

In an embodiment, light is reflected in the direction of the firstregion 641 and the third region 643 by the second region 642 of the exitsurface 640 of the resin member 650, thereby improving luminousintensity, that is, central luminous intensity, at the second region 642and its periphery. In an embodiment, when a reflective member of a filmtype is removed between the resin member 650 and the substrate 401, athickness of the lighting module may be reduced and the manufacturingprocess may be simplified. In such a structure, since a light amount ishigh in a range of 0 to 20 degrees with respect to the straight lineperpendicular to the emitting region 101 of the light emitting device100 by the second region 642 of the exit surface 640 of the resin member650, it can be seen that luminous intensity around a center of the resinmember 650 is improved.

FIGS. 72 to 74 are modified examples of the lighting module of FIG. 68,which are structures in which a shape of an exit surface of a resinmember is modified.

Referring to FIGS. 72 to 74, a resin member 650 may include an exitsurface 640B, and the exit surface 640B may include a first region 641Ain which at least a portion thereof is overlapped with a light emittingdevice 100 in the vertical direction, a second region 641B in which apart adjacent to the first region 641A is overlapped with the lightemitting device 100 in the vertical direction, and a third region 641Cin which a height of an upper surface thereof is disposed to begradually lowered and which is disposed between the second region 641Band a second side surface S12. The light emitting device 100 may bedisposed to be overlapped with the first and second regions 641A and641B of the exit surface 640B, and may be spaced apart from a first sidesurface S11 of the resin member 650.

The first region 641A in the exit surface 640B may have a first lightextraction structure F5. The first light extraction structure F5 mayinclude a prism shape, for example, a pattern having a triangular prismshape in a side cross section. A width B31 of the first region 641A maybe smaller than a width B32 of the second region 641B. The first region641A may be overlapped with the light emitting device 100 in thevertical direction.

The second region 641B in the exit surface 640B may have a convex curvedsurface upward or a convex curved surface toward an opposite side of thesubstrate 401. The convex curved surface may be a smooth curve passing aplurality of given control points, and may include a curve having aplurality of inflection points and a polynomial between adjacent twopoints, which may be defined as a spline curve. An entire region of thesecond region 641B may have a convex curved surface G5 and may bedisposed on an upper front region and an emitting region 101 of thelight emitting device 100 to diffuse incident light. The width B32 ofthe second region 641B may be greater than a width of the light emittingdevice 100 in the Y direction. A width d3 of a part of the second region641B overlapped with the light emitting device 100 may be disposed in arange of 10% to 40% of the width B32 of the second region 641B, so thatit is possible to cover an upper direction of the light emitting device100 and a top of the emitting region 101 to diffuse incident light, andto prevent hot spots. The second region 641B may increase luminousintensity on the light emitting device 100 and a region therearound bydiffusing light. In such a structure, a light amount is high in a rangeof 0 to +30 degrees with respect to a straight line perpendicular to theemitting region 101 of the light emitting device 100 by the secondregion 641B of the exit surface 640B of the resin member 650, and thusit can be seen that luminous intensity around a center of the resinmember 650 is improved.

The third region 641C may include a second light extraction structureF6. A detailed configuration of the third region 641C will be describedwith reference to the description of the first embodiment.

FIG. 75 is a side cross-sectional view illustrating a first modifiedexample of the lighting module of FIG. 69, FIG. 76 is a partiallyenlarged view of the lighting module of FIG. 75, and FIG. 77 is a viewillustrating an optical path in the lighting module of FIG. 75. Indescribing the present embodiment, the same configuration as theabove-disclosed embodiment (s) is referred to the description of theembodiment disclosed above, and may be selectively applied to thepresent embodiment.

Referring to FIGS. 75 to 77, a lighting module includes a substrate 401,a light emitting device 100 disposed on the substrate 401, and a resinmember 650 covering the light emitting device 100 on the substrate 401.The lighting module may include a reflective member 410A of a film typeor a reflective layer of a solder resist material between the substrate401 and the resin member 650.

The resin member 650 may include a plurality of side surfaces, forexample, first and second side surfaces S11 and S12 opposite to eachother. The resin member 650 may include an exit surface 660 at an upperportion thereof. The exit surface 660 may include a light extractionstructure.

The exit surface 660 of the resin member 650 may include a first region661 adjacent to the first side surface S11 and at least a portion ofwhich is overlapped with the light emitting device 100 in the verticaldirection, a second region 662 concaved between the first region 661 andthe second side surface S12, and a third region 663 disposed between thesecond region 662 and the second side surface S12. The exit surface 660of the resin member 650 may include a fourth region 664 between thethird region 663 and the second side surface S12.

As shown in FIGS. 75 and 76, at least a portion of the first region 661of the exit surface 660 may be overlapped with the light emitting device100 in the vertical direction. A boundary portion between the firstregion 661 and the second region 662 may be disposed in an exitdirection or a direction of the second side surface S12 further than anemitting region 101 of the light emitting device 100. Accordingly, lightincident through the boundary portion between the first and secondregions 661 and 662 may be extracted to the first region 661. The firstregion 661 may include a first light extraction structure F11, and thefirst light extraction structure F11 may be disposed adjacent to thefirst side surface S11.

The first region 661 may include a protrusion portion F12 and at least aportion of the protrusion portion F12 may be overlapped with the lightemitting device 100. The protrusion portion F12 may be disposed to belong in a length of the Y direction of the resin member 650. Theprotrusion portion F12 may include an inclined first surface Fa, asecond surface Fb of an upper portion thereof, and an inclined thirdsurface Fc. The first and third surfaces Fa and Fc may correspond toeach other, and the first surface Fa may extend to be inclined from thesecond region 662 and may reflect light incident from the second region662. The second surface Fb may be connected from the first and thirdsurfaces Fa and Fc and extend in a horizontal direction or have ahorizontal plane, and may transmit or reflect light incident from thefirst surface Fa. The third surface Fc may have an inclined surface, andmay transmit or reflect light reflected by the second surface Fb. Here,the first surface Fa may be inclined at a predetermined angle r5 withrespect to a horizontal straight line, and the third surface Fc may beinclined at a predetermined angle r6 with respect to the horizontalstraight line. The inclined angle r5 of the first surface Fa may begreater than the inclined angle r6 of the third surface Fc. Theinclination angle r5 of the first surface Fa may be 35 degrees or more,for example, in a range of 35 to 75 degrees, or in a range of 40 to 50degrees. The inclination angle r6 of the third surface Fc may be 25degrees or more, for example, in a range of 25 to 60 degrees, or in arange of 25 to 30 degrees. Accordingly, light incident by the firstsurface Fa inclined at a large angle r5 may be reflected, and the lightmay be transmitted or reflected by the third surface Fc inclined at asmall angle r6 (r6<r5). A boundary portion between the first surface Faof the protrusion portion F12 and the second region 662, for example, alower end portion of the first surface Fa may be disposed to be adjacentto the second side surface S12 than the emitting region 101 of the lightemitting device 100. Accordingly, light emitted upward from the lightemitting device 100 or light reflected from the substrate 401 may bere-incident in a direction of the first region 661.

At least a portion of the protrusion portion F12 of the first region 661may be overlapped with the light emitting device 100 in the verticaldirection. The first to third surfaces Fa, Fb and Fc of the protrusionportion F12 may be overlapped with the light emitting device 100 in thevertical direction, and a lower portion of the first surface Fa may notbe overlapped with the light emitting device 100 in the verticaldirection. Here, a distance d4 between an upper end of the first surfaceFa and a straight line perpendicular to the emitting region 101 of thelight emitting device 100 may be disposed to be 0.1 mm or more, forexample, in a range of 0.1 to 1 mm to guide light. In addition, astraight line perpendicular to a lower end of the first surface Fa maybe spaced apart from the straight line perpendicular to the emittingregion 101 at a predetermined distance d6, so that light travelingupward from the emitting region 101 or light reflected from thesubstrate 401 may be incident to be guided in the first region 661. Thedistance d6 may be 0.2 mm or more, for example, in a range of 0.2 to 2mm. The distance d6 may be disposed to be large in a range of 1.5 to 3times the distance d4, so that it is possible to prevent hot spots byguiding light to the first region 661 and suppressing light transmissionvia the second surface Fb.

An upper surface of the protrusion portion F12 of the first region 661may be disposed at a predetermined distance T46 from an upper surface ofthe light emitting device 100, for example, 1 time or more a thicknessT1 the light emitting device 100, for example, in a range of 1 time to2.5 times. The protrusion portion F12 may reduce occurrence of darkportions in an upper portion and a rear portion of the light emittingdevice 100.

The second region 662 of the exit surface 660 may be disposed to behigher than the upper surface of the light emitting device 100 and inthe direction of the second side surface S12 than the straight lineperpendicular to the emitting region 101 of the light emitting device100. As shown in FIG. 77, the second region 662 may reflect someincident light to the first region 661, and may reflect other light tothe third and fourth regions 663 and 664 or in a direction of thesubstrate.

As shown in FIG. 76, the second region 662 may include a firstreflective surface G10 extending in the vertical direction from thefirst surface Fa of the first region 661, a second reflective surfaceG11 extending in the exit direction from the first reflective surfaceG10, and a second light extraction structure F13 between the secondreflective surface G11 and the third region 663. The first reflectivesurface G10 may be disposed in the exit direction or the direction ofthe second side surface S12 than the straight line perpendicular to theemitting region 101 of the light emitting device 100. The distance d6between the first reflective surface G10 and the vertical straight linemay be greater than the distance d4 between the upper end of the firstsurface Fa of the first region 661 and the straight line perpendicularto the emitting region 101.

The first reflective surface G10 may not be overlapped with the lightemitting device 100 in the vertical direction. An internal angle betweenthe first reflective surface G10 of the second region 662 and the firstsurface Fa of the first region 661 may be disposed at an obtuse angle.The first reflective surface G10 may be disposed as a vertical surfaceor an inclined surface with respect to the vertical straight line toreflect incident light in a direction of the first region 661. Thesecond reflective surface G11 may include a concave curved surface. Theconcave curved surface may be concave in the direction of the substrate,and may not be overlapped with the light emitting device 100 in thevertical direction. The second reflective surface G11 may be disposed tobe higher than the upper surface of the light emitting device 100, andfor example, may be spaced apart from the upper surface of the lightemitting device 100 at a predetermined distance d5, and the distance d5may be 0.3 mm or more, for example, in a range of 0.3 to 3 mm. Here, thed5 may be larger than the d6 by 0.1 mm or more, and the d6 may be largerthan the d4 by 0.1 mm or more, which may have a relationship ofd5>d6>d4.

The second reflective surface G11 may be disposed in a range of 45degrees or less from the straight line perpendicular with respect to acenter of the emitting region 101 of the light emitting device 100, sothat incident light may be reflected to the third region 663 or in thedirection of the substrate. A width E41 of the second reflective surfaceG11 may be disposed in the Y direction in a range of 40% to 60% of awidth of the second region 662, so that incident light may beeffectively reflected. The width E41 may be 0.5 mm or more, for example,in a range of 0.5 to 3 mm.

The second region 662 may include a second light extraction structureF13, and the second light extraction structure F13 may be disposedbetween the second reflective surface G11 and the third region 663. Thesecond light extraction structure F13 may include a concavo-convexpattern, for example, a prism-shaped pattern. The prism-shaped patternis a pattern with a triangular shape in a side cross section, and theprism-shaped pattern may be disposed at a height gradually higher as itis farther from the light emitting device 100. The vertexes of the prismpattern may be disposed to be closer to the third region 663 from thepattern center. In the triangular prism pattern (or a mountainstructure) of the second light extraction structure F13, a width of afirst side in a direction of the first side surface S11 may be disposedto be wider than a width of a second side at the opposite side in the Ydirection, thereby increasing light reflection efficiency. As shown inFIG. 76, the first side may be disposed at an angle r7 less than 60degrees with respect to a horizontal straight line, and an internalangle m3 of the first and second sides may be disposed at an acuteangle.

A distance E42 of the patterns in the second light extraction structureF13 may be smaller than the width E41 of the second reflective surfaceG11 and may be arranged constantly. The distance E42 of the patterns inthe second light extraction structure F13 may be larger than a distanceE43 (see FIG. 77) of the patterns of the second light extractionstructure F14 in the third region 663. Accordingly, central luminousintensity and light extraction efficiency may be improved by the secondlight extraction structure F13.

The third region 663 of the exit surface 660 may be disposed at a heightgradually lower from a high point of the second region 662. A width B43in the Y direction of the third region 663 may be disposed to be 40% ormore, for example, in a range of 40% to 65% of a width of the resinmember 650 in the Y direction. The third region 663 may include a thirdlight extraction structure F14. The third light extraction structure F14may include a concavo-convex pattern, for example, a prism-shapedpattern. The prism-shaped pattern is a pattern with a triangular shapein a side cross section, and the prism-shaped pattern may be disposed ata height gradually lower as it is farther from the light emitting device100. The vertexes of the prism patterns of the third light extractionstructure F14 may be disposed to be closer to the second region 662 fromthe pattern center. In the triangular prism pattern (or the mountainstructure) of the third light extraction structure F14, a width of thefirst side in the direction of the first side surface S11 may bedisposed to be narrower than a width of the second side at the oppositeside in the Y direction. In the prism-shaped pattern, a length of thefirst side in the direction of the first side surface S11 may bedisposed to be shorter than a length of the second side at the oppositeside. A pattern height of the third light extraction structure F14 maybe smaller than the pattern height of the second light extractionstructure F13. As shown in FIG. 77, the third light extraction structureF14 may reflect or refract light incident from the light emitting device100, and may extract light reflected from the substrate direction.

As shown in FIG. 75, the fourth region 664 of the exit surface 660 maybe disposed between the third region 663 and the second side surfaceS12. The fourth region 664 may have a height lower than a height of alow point of the third region 663. The fourth region 664 may be disposedto have a concave curved surface G14 or an inclined surface in thedirection of the substrate, and may reflect the light reflected by thethird region 663 in the direction of the substrate. A straight lineconnecting two points of the concave curved surface G14 at an upper endof the fourth region 664 may be disposed at an angle of 35 degrees ormore, for example, in a range of 35 to 75 degrees with respect to thehorizontal straight line. A width B44 of the fourth region 664 may besmaller than widths B41 and B42 of the first and second regions 661 and662.

The fourth region 664 may be disposed at a height T47 (see FIG. 75)greater than a height T3 of the second side surface S12 from the secondside surface S12, and for example, may be disposed in a range of 1 timeto 3 times the height T3 of the second side surface S12. A low point ofthe fourth region 664 may be disposed to be lower than the upper surfaceof the light emitting device 100. A boundary portion between the fourthregion 664 and the second side surface S12 may be disposed to be lowerthan the upper surface of the light emitting device 100. A high point ofthe fourth region 664 may be disposed to be higher than the uppersurface of the light emitting device 100. A boundary portion between thefourth region 664 and the third region 663 may be disposed to be higherthan the upper surface of the light emitting device 100. Accordingly, asshown in FIG. 77, light emitted from the light emitting device 100 in adirection of the horizontal straight line or the optical axis Y0 may bereflected in the direction of the substrate by the fourth region 664, sothat leakage of light may be prevented and light may be reused.

At least a portion of the fourth region 664 may be overlapped with atleast a portion of the light emitting device 100 in the horizontaldirection. At least a portion of the fourth region 664 may correspond tothe emitting region 101 of the light emitting device 100.

FIG. 78 is a modified example of FIG. 76, in which the second region ofthe resin member is modified.

As shown in FIG. 78, the second region 662 of the resin member 650 mayinclude a first reflective surface G1 extending from the first region661, a prism-shaped second reflective surface G11 having a concavecurved surface, and a third light extraction structure F13. The secondreflective surface G11 may reflect light by a prism pattern having aconcave curved surface in the direction of the substrate.

The third light extraction structure F13 may be disposed between thesecond reflective surface G11 and the third region 663. In the prismpattern of the third light extraction structure F13, a length of a firstside adjacent to the first side surface S11 may disposed to be longerthan a length of a second side at the opposite side, and an angle m4 ofan internal angle of the first and second sides may be 60 degrees ormore. Patterns of the third light extraction structure F13 may bearranged in the Y direction, and a distance E42 of each of the patternsmay be smaller than a width E41 of the second reflective surface G11.The prism pattern may have the internal angle m4 larger than theinternal angle m3 of the prism pattern of FIG. 76, and two oppositesides of the prism pattern may be disposed to be inclined to controllight extraction efficiency.

FIG. 79 is a perspective view illustrating a second modified example ofthe lighting module of FIG. 69, FIG. 80 is a partial sidecross-sectional view of the lighting module of FIG. 79, FIG. 81 is apartial enlarged view of first and second regions of the lighting moduleof FIG. 80, FIG. 82 is an enlarged view of a first region of thelighting module of FIG. 80, and FIG. 83 is an enlarged view of a thirdregion of the lighting module of FIG. 80. In describing the presentembodiment, the same configuration as the above-disclosed embodiment(s)is referred to the description of the embodiment disclosed above, andmay be selectively applied to the present embodiment.

Referring to FIGS. 79 to 83, a lighting module according to anembodiment includes a substrate 401, a light emitting device 100disposed on the substrate 401, and a resin member 650 covering the lightemitting device 100 on the substrate 401. In the lighting module, areflective member 410A of a film type or reflective material may bedisposed between the substrate 401 and the resin member 650, but is notlimited thereto.

The resin member 650 may be arranged on the substrate 401 in one orplural in one direction. The light emitting device 100 may be disposedin the resin member 650. A light emitting cell 650A may include a unitcell emitting on the substrate 401, and the unit cell may include theresin member 650 and the light emitting device 100. The light emittingdevice 100 may be disposed to be adjacent to a first side surface S11 ofthe resin member 650 and emit light in a direction of a second sidesurface S12 at the opposite side.

As shown in FIG. 80, in the resin member 650, a portion adjacent to thefirst side surface S11 has the thickest thickness, and a portionadjacent to the second side surface S12 has the thinnest thickness. Aheight T2 of the first side surface S11 may be at least two times aheight T3 of the second side surface S12. A maximum thickness of theresin member 650 may be at least twice a minimum thickness. An upper endof the second side surface S12 of the resin member 650 is disposed in arange of ±0.5 mm with respect to an upper surface of the light emittingdevice 100 to reduce a loss of light. The height T2 of the first sidesurface S11 or the maximum thickness of the resin member 650 may beequal to or more than 3 mm, and the height T3 of the second side surfaceS12 or the minimum thickness may be equal to or less than 1.5 mm andequal to or more than 0.5 mm.

As shown in FIGS. 81 and 82, an exit surface 670 of the resin member 650may include a first region 671 overlapped with the light emitting device100 in the vertical direction, a second region 672 disposed between thefirst region 671 and the second side surface S12, a third region 673disposed between the second region 672 and the second side surface S12,and a fourth region 674 between the third region 673 and the second sidesurface S12.

The first region 671 may include a first light extraction structure F21and a protrusion portion F22, and may have a width B51 of 2 mm or more.A height of an upper surface of the first region 671 may be the heightT2 of the first side surface S11, and may be the highest height of theresin member 650 and may be 2 mm or more.

Referring to FIGS. 81 and 82, the protrusion portion F22 of the firstregion 671 may include a flat surface extended from the second region672, and a transmittance of light incident from the light emittingdevice 100 may be lowered. The first light extraction structure F21 mayhave a pattern with a triangular shape in a side cross section, and aninternal angle m6 (see FIG. 82) of two adjacent sides may have a rangeof 40 to 70 degrees. The first region 671 may extract light reflected bythe protrusion portion F22 via the first light extraction structure F21,so that an occurrence of dark portions on the first region 671 may besuppressed. The upper surface of the first region 671 may have apredetermined height T2 from a low point of the second region 672, forexample, 0.3 mm or more, for example, in a range of 0.3 to 1 mm. Theupper surface of the first region 671 is disposed to be relatively high,so that incidence efficiency may be improved, and an occurrence of darkportions may be suppressed.

The second region 672 may be disposed in the exit direction or thedirection of the second side surface S12 than an emitting region 101 ofthe light emitting device 100, so that incident light may be reflectedto the first region 671 or the third region 673, or in the direction ofthe substrate. The second region 672 may include a first reflectivesurface F23 adjacent to the first region 671 and a second reflectivesurface F24 extending in the Y direction from a lower end portion of thefirst reflective surface F23. The first reflective surface F23 may be asurface perpendicular to a horizontal straight line, or an inclinedsurface. The first reflective surface F23 may be disposed at an angler31 (see FIG. 82) with respect to a horizontal straight line of thefirst region 671, more than 91 degrees, for example, in a range of 90 to120 degrees, so that light L8 (see FIG. 81) in a direction of the firstregion 671 may be reflected. A width B60 of the first and secondreflective surfaces F23 and F24 may be 1 mm or less, for example, in arange of 0.3 to 1 mm.

As shown in FIGS. 80 and 81, the second reflective surface F24 may havea flat horizontal surface or a concave curved surface and may be locatedto be closest to the light emitting device 100, so that a transmittanceof light L9 (see FIG. 81) directly incident from the light emittingdevice 100 may be lowered and the reflectance may be increased. Thesecond region 672 may include a third reflective surface F25 between thesecond reflective surface F24 and the third region 673. The thirdreflective surface F25 may include a convex curved surface. A width B61in the Y direction of the third reflective surface F25 may be disposedbe 65% or more, for example, 65% to 85% of a width B52 of the secondregion 672. The width B61 of the third reflective surface F25 may bedisposed in a range of 1.5 mm or more, for example, 1.5 to 2.5 mm. Thethird reflective surface F25 may be disposed at a height higher from thesecond reflective surface F24 as it is farther from the light emittingdevice 100. The third reflective surface F25 of such a second region 672reflects light L10 (see FIG. 81) generated from the light emittingdevice 100 in the exit direction and the second reflective surface F24and the third reflective surface F25 reflect the light generated fromthe light emitting device 100 in a direction of the substrate. The lightreflected in the direction of the substrate may be reflected by thereflective member 410A on the substrate 401 and extracted to the outsidevia the third region 673. Here, in the embodiment, when areas of thesecond and third reflective surfaces F24 and F25 of the second region672 are disposed to be wider than those of other embodiments and thereflective member of the film type is removed, hot spots may beprevented by covering the reflective region of light (light reflected bylight splashing phenomenon) coming from the substrate 401.

The third region 673 may include a second light extraction structure F26and a fourth reflective surface F27 adjacent to the second region 672.The fourth reflective surface F27 may be disposed between the secondlight extraction structure F26 and the fourth region 674. A width B53 ofthe third region 673 may be disposed in a range of 30% to 50% of thelength in the Y direction of the resin member 650. The second lightextraction structure F26 may diffuse and extract incident light, and thefourth reflective surface F27 may transmit light in the direction of thesubstrate or to the fourth region 674 by reflecting the incident light.A width B62 of the second light extraction structure F26 may be disposedin a range of 40% to 60% of the width B53 of the third region 673. Thesecond light extraction structure F26 may include a prism-shapedpattern, and an internal angle of two sides of the prism-shaped patternmay be disposed in a range of 50 to 70 degrees to emit light. A highpoint (or vertex) of the prism pattern may be disposed at a center ofthe pattern. The fourth reflective surface F27 may include a convexcurved surface, and a height of an upper surface may gradually decrease.The fourth reflective surface F27 may be formed as a spline curve. Thewidth B53 of the third region 673 may be equal to or smaller than thewidth B62 of the second light extraction structure F26. The third region673 may be disposed at a center side among the exit surface 670 of theresin member 650, so that light diffused via the second light extractionstructure F26 adjacent to the second region 672 may be extracted, andmay be transmitted to the second side surface S12 or in the direction ofthe substrate by the concave fourth reflective surface F27 adjacent tothe fourth region 674.

Referring to FIGS. 80 and 84, the fourth region 674 of the exit surface670 may include a fourth light extraction structure F28. The fourthlight extraction structure F28 may include a prism-shaped pattern, andthe prism-shaped pattern may have a triangular shape. The prism patternmay be disposed to have a height gradually lower as it is adjacent tothe second side surface S12 of the resin member 650. A width B54 of thefourth region 674 may be equal to a width B64 of the fourth lightextraction structure F28. As shown in FIG. 83, the prism pattern of thefourth light extraction structure F28 may be disposed to have a highpoint closer to the third region 673, and an internal angle m7 thereofmay be 60 degrees or more. The fourth light extraction structure F28 ofthe fourth region 674 may diffuse and emit light reflected from thelight emitting device 100 or the substrate direction.

The exit surface 670 of the resin member 650 may be disposed to haveline segments connecting the third reflective surface F25 of the secondregion 672, a surface of the third region 673, and a surface of thefourth region 674 continuously connected in a convex curve, so thatlight uniformity and light efficiency in the entire region may beimproved.

FIG. 84 illustrates an example of a prism-shaped pattern of the lightextraction structure according to an embodiment. An internal angle m8 ofadjacent two sides S1 and S2 of the prism pattern in a light extractionstructure F20 may be in a range of 30 to 120 degrees and a bottom widthB84 may be greater than a height V2. In the prism-shaped pattern of thelight extraction structure F20, the bottom width B84 may be in a rangeof 0.3 to 0.7 mm, and the height V2 may be in a range of 40% to 80% ofthe bottom width B84. A position of a vertex P30 part may be varieddepending on lengths of two sides of the prism-shaped pattern. Theprism-shaped pattern may be disposed to have a length of the first sideS1 and a length of the second side S2 equal to each other or one lengththereof longer.

As shown in FIG. 85, the prism-shaped pattern may be formed to have avertex P30 as shown in (a) or a curved surface P31 having apredetermined curvature R as shown in (b). The curvature R of the curvemay be in a range of 0.1 mm±0.05 mm.

FIGS. 86 to 88 are views for explaining a process of forming an exitsurface of a resin member in the lighting module of FIG. 80.

As shown in FIG. 86, the light emitting device 100 is disposed on thesubstrate 401 and then the resin member 650 is formed into a polygonalshape covering the light emitting device 100. Then, as shown in FIG. 87,etching is performed at different etching depths so that surfaces ofregions 671A, 672A, and 673A of the exit surface 670 are exposed. Then,as shown in FIG. 88, the light extraction structures F21, F26, and F28are selectively formed in the first, third, and fourth regions to formthe exit surface of the resin member 650.

The lighting module according to the sixth embodiment may be arranged asshown in FIGS. 64 and 65, but is not limited thereto.

In illumination characteristics of the lighting module according to thesixth embodiment, as shown in FIG. 96, Example 1 is a case in which areflective member is applied to the lighting module as shown in FIG. 68,and Example 2 is an example in which a reflective member is removed anda reflective layer of the substrate is disposed. As in Examples 1 and 2of FIG. 96, it can be seen that the illumination characteristic in thestructure as in Example 2 is higher at the angle of ±10 degrees or lesswith respect to the vertical straight line.

In the sixth embodiment, it is possible to increase light extractionefficiency and central luminous intensity by further adding a secondregion having a concave recess in the exit surface of the resin member.Further, the light extraction structure is selectively disposed at theexit surface, so that a light guide distance may be reduced and lightefficiency may be improved. Furthermore, concave and/or convex curvedsurfaces is selectively disposed at the exit surface, and thus lightextraction efficiency may be maximized and light uniformity may beincreased.

FIG. 89 is a view showing a lighting device having the lighting moduleaccording to the sixth embodiment. The lighting module in the lightingdevice will be described with reference to the configuration anddescription of the lighting module described above.

As shown in FIG. 89, the lighting module 600 includes the moduledisclosed in the embodiment, for example, includes a substrate 401, aplurality of light emitting devices 100 on the substrate 401, and aresin member 650 and a reflective member 410. A plurality of resinmembers 650 may be disposed on the substrate 401. As shown in FIG. 1,the lighting module 600 may be arranged with a plurality of lightemitting cells 650A. The lighting module 600 may include the reflectivemember 410 in the form of a film or may include a reflecting member madeof a solder resist material on the substrate.

An optical member 230 may be disposed on the lighting module 600, andthe optical member 230 may diffuse and transmit incident light. Theoptical member 230 uniformly diffuses and emits the surface light sourceemitted through the resin member 550. The optical member 230 may includean optical lens or an inner lens, and the optical lens may condense thelight toward the target or change the path of the light. The opticalmember 230 may include a plurality of lens portions 231 on at least oneof the upper surface and the lower surface of the optical member 230,and the lens portions 231 may have a shape protruding downward from theoptical member 230 or may have a shape protruding upward from theoptical member 230. Such an optical member 230 may control the lightdistribution characteristics of the lighting device.

The lighting module 600 may include a heat dissipation plate (not shown)at a bottom surface thereof. The heat dissipation plate may include aplurality of heat dissipation fins and may dissipate heat conducted tothe substrate 401. The heat dissipation plate may include at least oneof metals such as aluminum, copper, magnesium, nickel, or an alloythereof.

The lighting device includes a housing 300 having a receiving space 305,a lighting module according to an embodiment disposed at the bottom ofthe receiving space of the housing 300, and an optical member 230disposed on the lighting module.

The housing 300 may be provided with an outer surface 303 of thereceiving space 305 as an inclined surface with respect to a bottomsurface of the housing 300. Such the inclined surface may improve lightextraction efficiency. The surface of the receiving space 305 of thehousing 300 may be formed with a metallic material of reflectivematerial and the light extraction efficiency in the receiving space 305may be improved by such metallic material. The depth of the receivingspace 305 is larger than the high point of the resin member 650 and canemit light emitted through the resin member 650.

The housing 300 includes a bottom portion 301 and a reflective portion302. The bottom portion 301 is disposed under the substrate 401. Thereflective portion 302 may protrude upward from an outer periphery ofthe bottom portion 301 and may be disposed around the resin member 650.The housing 300 may include a metal or a plastic material, but theinvention is not limited thereto. The lighting device according to theembodiment may be applied to various vehicle lighting devices such as ahead lamp, a side marker lamp, a side mirror lamp, a fog lamp, a taillamp, a stop lamp, a daytime running lamp, and a display device or atraffic lamps.

FIG. 90 is a plan view showing an example of a light emitting device ofthe lighting module according to the embodiment, FIG. 91 is a A-Asectional view of the light emitting device of FIG. 90, FIG. 92 is afront view in which the light emitting device of FIG. 90, FIG. 92 is ananother side view of the light emitting device of FIG. 92.

Referring to FIGS. 90 and 91, the light emitting device 100 includes abody 10 having a cavity 20, a plurality of lead frames 30 and 40 in thecavity 20, and a light emitting chip 101 is disposed on at least one ofthe plurality of lead frames 30 and 40. The light emitting device 100may be implemented as a side view light emitting type package.

In the light emitting device 100, a length D1 in a second direction Xmay be three times or more, for example, a four times or more than athickness T1 of the third direction. The length D1 in the seconddirection may be 2.5 mm or more, for example, in a range of 2.7 mm to4.5 mm. As the length D1 in the second direction of the light emittingdevice package 100 is provided longer, when the light emitting device100 are arranged in the second direction, the number of the lightemitting device 100 may be reduced. The light emitting device 100 can beprovided with a relatively thin thickness T1 and a thickness of a lightunit having the light emitting device 100 can reduce. The thickness T1of the light emitting device 100 may be less than or equal to 2 mm.

The length D1 in the second direction of the light emitting device 100may be greater than a length D2 of the body 10, and the thickness T1 maybe equal to a thickness of the body 10, for example, the thickness inthe third direction of the body 10. The length D2 of the body 10 may bethree times or more than the thickness of the body 10.

As shown in FIG. 92, The body 10 includes a first body 10A having acavity at a bottom thereof to which the lead frames 30 and 40 areexposed, and a second body 10B supporting the first body 10A. The firstbody 10A may be an upper portion body or a front portion body, and thesecond body 10B may be a lower portion body or a rear portion body. Thefirst body 10A may be a front portion region based on the lead frames 30and 40, and the second body 10B may be a rear region based on the leadframes 30 and 40. The first and second bodies 10A and 10B may beintegrally formed. The plurality of lead frames 30 and 40 such as afirst lead frame 30 and a second lead frame 40 are coupled to the body10.

The body 10 may be formed of an insulating material. The body 10 may beformed of a reflective material. The body 10 may be formed of a materialhaving a reflectance higher than a transmittance with respect to awavelength emitted from the light emitting chip 71, for example, amaterial having a reflectance of 70% or more. In the case in which thereflectance is 70% or more, the body 10 may be defined as anon-transparent material or a reflective material. The body 10 may beformed of a resin-based insulating material, for example, a resinmaterial such as Polyphthalamide (PPA). The body 10 may be formed of athermosetting resin including a silicone-based, epoxy-based, or plasticmaterial, or a material having high heat resistance and high lightresistance. The body 10 includes a white-based resin. In the body 10, anacid anhydride, an antioxidant, a release agent, a light reflector,inorganic filler, a curing catalyst, a light stabilizer, a lubricant,and titanium dioxide may be selectively added. The body 10 may be formedof at least one selected from the group consisting of an epoxy resin, amodified epoxy resin, a silicone resin, a modified silicone resin, anacrylic resin, and a urethane resin. For example, an epoxy resincomposed of triglycidyl isocyanurate, hydrogenated bisphenol Adiglycidyl ether, etc. and an acid anhydride composed ofhexahydrophthalic anhydride, 3-methylhexahydrophthalic anhydride,4-methylhexahydrophthalic anhydride, etc. are added with1,8-diazabicyclo(5, 4, 0) undecene-7 (DBU) as a curing agent, ethyleneglycol as a co-catalyst, titanium oxide pigment, and glass fiber in theepoxy resin, and thus, a solid epoxy resin composition which ispartially cured by heating and B stated may be used but the presentinvention is not limited thereto. The body 10 may be formed by suitablymixing at least one selected from the group consisting of a dispersant,a pigment, a fluorescent material, a reflective material, a lightshielding material, a light stabilizer, and a lubricant in athermosetting resin.

The body 10 may include a reflective material, such as a resin materialin which a metal oxide is added, and the metal oxide may include atleast one of TiO₂, SiO₂, and Al₂O₃Such a body 10 may effectively reflectincident light. As another example, the body 10 may be formed of a resinmaterial having a translucent resin material or a phosphor materialconverting a wavelength of incident light.

Side surfaces of the body 10 may include a first side portion 11 and asecond side portion 12 opposite to the first side portion 11, and thirdand fourth side portions 13 and 14 adjacent to the first and second sideportions 11 and 12 and disposed opposite to each other. The first andsecond side portions 11 and 112 are opposite to each other with respectto the first direction Y of the body 10, and the third and fourth sideportions 13 and 14 may be opposite to each other with respect to thesecond direction X. The first side portion 11 may be a bottom of thebody 10, the second side portion 12 may be an upper surface of the body10, the first and second side portions 11 and 12 may be a long sidesurface having the length D2 of the body 10, and the third and fourthside portions 13 and 14 may be a short side surface having a thicknesswhich is smaller than the thickness T1 of the body 10. The first sideportion 11 may be a side surface corresponding to a circuit board.

The body 10 may include the front side portion 15 and the rear sideportion 16, and the front side portion 15 may be a surface in which thecavity 20 is disposed, and may be a surface from which light is emitted.The front side portion 15 may be a front surface portion of the body 10.The rear side portion 16 may be the opposite side surface of the frontside portion 15. The rear side portion 16 may be a rear surface portionof the body 10. The rear side portion 16 may include a first rear sideportion 16A and a second rear side portion 16B, and a gate portion 16Cbetween the first rear side portion 16A and the second rear side portion16B. The gate portion 16C may be recessed between the first and secondrear side portions 16A and 16B in a cavity direction than the first andsecond rear side portions 16A and 16B.

The first lead frame 30 includes a first lead portion 31 disposed at thebottom of the cavity 20, a first bonding portion 32 disposed on a firstouter regions 11A and 11C of the first side portion 11 of the body 10,and a first heat radiating portion 33 disposed on the third side portion13 of the body 10. The first bonding portion 32 is bent from the firstlead portion 31 disposed in the body 10 and protrudes to the first sideportion 11, and the first heat radiating portion 33 may be bent from thefirst bonding portion 32. The first outer regions 11A and 11C of thefirst side portion 11 may be a region adjacent to the third side portion13 of the body 10.

The second lead frame 40 includes a second lead portion 41 disposed onthe bottom of the cavity 20, a second bonding portion 42 disposed onsecond outer regions 11B and 11D of the first side portion 11 of thebody 10, and a second heat radiating portion 43 disposed on the fourthside portion I4 of the body 10. The second bonding portion 42 is bentfrom the second lead portion 41 disposed in the body 10 and the secondheat radiating portion 43 may be bent from the second bonding portion42. The second outer regions 11B and 11D of the first side portion 11may be a region adjacent to the fourth side portion I4 of the body 10.

A gap portion 17 between the first and second lead portions 31 and 41may be formed of a material of the body 10 and may be the samehorizontal surface with the bottom of the cavity 20 or may protrude, butthe invention is not limited thereto. The first outer regions 11A and11C and the second outer regions 11B and 11D has an inclined regions 11Aand 11B and a flat regions 11C and 11D. The first and second bondingportions 32 and 42 of the first and second lead frames 30 and 40 mayprotrude through the inclined regions 11A and 11B, but the invention isnot limited thereto.

Here, the light emitting chip 71 may be disposed on, for example, thefirst lead portion 31 of the first lead frame 30. The light emittingchip 71 may be connected to the first and second lead parts 31 and 41 bywires 72 and 73, or the light emitting chip 71 may be adhesivelyconnected to the first lead part 31 and connected to the second leadpart 41 by wire. The light emitting chip 71 may be a horizontal chip, avertical chip, or a chip having a via-structure. The light emitting chip71 may be mounted in a flip chip manner. The light emitting chip 71 mayselectively emit light within a wavelength range of an ultraviolet rayto a visible ray. The light emitting chip 71 may emit ultraviolet lightor a blue peak wavelength, for example. The light emitting chip 71 mayinclude at least one of a group II-VI compound and a group III-Vcompound. The light emitting chip 71 may be formed of a compoundselected from the group consisting of GaN, AlGaN, InGaN, AlInGaN, GaP,AN, GaAs, AlGaAs, InP and mixtures thereof. The light emitting chip 71may be disposed in the cavity 20 in one or more. The plurality of lightemitting chips 71 may be disposed on at least one of the first leadframe 30 and the second lead frame 40.

In an inner side of the cavity 20, first, second, third and fourth innersides 21, 22, 23 and 24 disposed around the cavity 20 may be inclinedwith respect to a horizontal straight line of an upper surface of thelead frames 30 and 40. A first inner side 21 adjacent to the first sideportion 11 and a second inner side 22 adjacent to the second sideportion 12 is inclined at an angle to the bottom of the cavity 20, and athird inner side 23 adjacent to the third side portion 13 and a fourthinner side 24 adjacent to the fourth side portion I4 may be inclined atan angle smaller than the inclination angle of the first and secondinner sides 21 and 22. Accordingly, the first and second inner sides 21and 22 reflect the progress of the incident light toward the firstdirection Y, and the third and fourth inner sides 23 and 24 may diffusethe incident light in the second direction X.

The inner side surfaces 21, 22, 23 and 24 of the cavity 20 may have astepped region 25 vertically stepped from the front side portion 15 ofthe body 10. The stepped region 25 may be disposed to be stepped betweenthe front side portion 15 of the body 10 and the inner sides 21, 22, 23and 24. The stepped region 25 may control the directivity characteristicof the light emitted through the cavity 20.

As shown in FIG. 91, a depth H2 of the cavity 20 may be ⅓ or less of awidth H1 of the body 10, for example, in a range of 0.3 mm±0.05 mm. Inthe case in which the depth H2 of the cavity 20 is less than the aboverange, it is difficult to control the directivity angle of light, and inthe case of exceeding the above range, there is a problem that the widthH1 of the body 10 is increased or the angle of beam spread is narrowed.

Here, the width H1 of the body 10 may be a distance between the frontside portion 15 and the rear side portion 16 of the body 10. Here, thewidth H1 of the body 10 may be greater than the thickness T1 of the body10, and the difference between the width H1 and the thickness T1 of thebody 10 may be 0.05 mm or more, for example, in a range of 0.05 mm to0.5 mm, and in the case in which the thickness T1 of the body 10 isgreater than the difference, the thickness of the light unit may beincreased, and in the case of being smaller than the above range, theheat radiation area of the lead frames 30 and 40 may be reduced.

The third and fourth side portions 13 and 14 of the body 10 may have aconcave portions 35 and 45 recessed inwardly, and fingers supporting thebody 10 may be inserted into the concave portions 35 and 45 during theinjection process of the body 10. The concave portions 35 and 45 may bedisposed on extension line extended parallel with the first and secondlead portions 31 and 41 of the first and second lead frames 30 and 40.The concave portions 35 and 45 may be disposed to be spaced apart fromthe first and second lead portions 31 and 41. A depth of the concaveportions 35 and 45 may be formed in a depth through which a portion ofthe concave portions 35 and 45 may be overlapped with the cavity 20, forexample, a portion of the cavity 20 in a vertical direction, but it isnot limited thereto.

A rear receiving region of the third and fourth side portions 13 and 14of the body 10 include first regions 13A and 14A inclined from the thirdside portion 13 and the fourth side portion 14, and second regions 13Band 14B inclined from the first regions 13A and 14A.

The light emitting chip 71 disposed in the cavity 20 of the lightemitting device 100 according to the embodiment may be providedsingularly or in plural. The light emitting chip 71 may be selectedfrom, for example, a red LED chip, a blue LED chip, a green LED chip,and a yellow green LED chip.

A molding member 81 is disposed in the cavity 20 of the body 10, and themolding member 81 includes a light transmitting resin such as siliconeor epoxy and may be formed in a single layer or multiple layers. Aphosphor may be included on the molding member 81 or the light emittingchip 71 for changing the wavelength of emitted light, and the phosphorexcites a part of the light emitted from the light emitting chip 71 andemits the excited light as light of a different wavelength. The phosphormay be selectively formed from a quantum dot, a YAG, a TAG, a silicate,a nitride, and an oxy-nitride-based material. The phosphor may includeat least one of a red phosphor, a yellow phosphor, and a green phosphor,but the invention is not limited thereto. The surface of the moldingmember 61 may be formed in a flat shape, a concave shape, a convexshape, or the like, but is not limited thereto. As another example, atranslucent film having a phosphor may be disposed on the cavity 20, butthe present invention is not limited thereto.

A lens may be further formed on the body 10, and the lens may include aconcave and/or convex lens structure and may adjust the lightdistribution of the light emitted from the light emitting device 100.

A semiconductor device such as a light receiving device or a protectiondevice may be mounted on the body 10 or any one of the lead frames, andthe protection device may be implemented as a thyristor, a Zener diode,or a TVS (Transient Voltage Suppression), and the Zener diode protectsthe light emitting chip 71 from electrostatic discharge (ESD).

Referring to FIGS. 92 and 93, at least one or a plurality of lightemitting device packages 100 is disposed on the substrate 201. Thesubstrate 201 includes a board on which a circuit pattern is printed onan insulating layer, and may include, for example, a resin-based printedcircuit board (PCB), a metal core PCB, a flexible PCB, a ceramic PCB,and an FR-4 substrate.

The first and second lead portions 33 and 43 of the light emittingdevice 100 are bonded to electrode patterns 213 and 215 of the substrate201 with solder or a conductive tape which is conductive bonding members203 and 205.

FIGS. 94 and 95 are a views showing of a vehicle lamp to which thelighting module or a lighting device according to the embodiment isapplied.

Referring to FIGS. 94 and 94, a tail lamp 800 in a vehicle 900 mayinclude a first lamp unit 812, a second lamp unit 814, a third lamp unit816, and a housing 810. Here, the first lamp unit 812 may be a lightsource serving as a turn signal lamp, the second lamp unit 814 may be alight source serving as a side marker lamp, and the third lamp unit 816may be a light source serving as a stop lamp, but is not limitedthereto. At least one or all of the first to third lamp units 812, 814,and 816 may include the lighting module disclosed in an embodiment.

The housing 810 accommodates the first to third lamp units 812, 814, and816, and may be made of a light transmitting material. At this point,the housing 810 may have a curve according to a design of a vehiclebody, and the first to third lamp units 812, 814, and 816 may have acurved surface light source according to a shape of the housing 810.Such a vehicle lamp may be applied to a turn signal lamp of a vehiclewhen the lamp unit is applied to a tail lamp, a stop lamp, or a turnsignal lamp of a vehicle.

Here, in a safety standard of the vehicle lamp, when the light ismeasured with reference to the front light, the light distributionstandard of the tail lamp is in a range of 4 to 5 candelas (cd), thelight distribution standard of the brake lamp is in a range of 60 to 80candelas (cd). It is possible to provide an average luminancedistribution of 28000 nits or more on the lighting module and the lensaccording to the embodiment, and to provide a light distribution of 50candelas or more. The lamp, such as the brake lamp, the tail lamp, andthe like may provide brightness within the vehicle safety standards.

The characteristics, structures and effects described in theabove-described embodiments are included in at least one embodiment butare not limited to one embodiment. Furthermore, the characteristic,structure, and effect illustrated in each embodiment may be combined ormodified for other embodiments by a person skilled in the art. Thus, itwould be construed that contents related to such a combination and sucha modified example are included in the scope of the invention.

In addition, embodiments are mostly described above. However, they areonly examples and do not limit the invention. A person skilled in theart may appreciate that several variations and applications notpresented above may be made without departing from the essentialcharacteristics of the embodiments. For example, each componentparticularly represented in the embodiments may be varied. In addition,it should be construed that differences related to such a variation andsuch an application are included in the scope of the invention definedin the following claims.

INDUSTRIAL APPLICABILITY

The present invention may be used in a lighting module or a lightingdevice that provides a surface light source or a light source having aconstant line width.

The lighting module or lighting device of the present invention may beused for various kinds of lamps.

The lighting module or lighting device of the present invention may beused in a vehicle lamp.

The invention claimed is:
 1. A lighting module comprising: a substrate;a light emitting device disposed on the substrate; a resin memberdisposed on the substrate and sealing the light emitting device; and areflecting member disposed between the resin member and the substrate,wherein the resin member includes a plurality of side surfaces and anupper surface, wherein the plurality of side surfaces includes a firstside surface disposed to rear of the light emitting device, a secondside surface disposed in front of the light emitting device, and thirdand fourth side surfaces disposed between both ends of the first andsecond side surfaces, wherein the first side surface and the second sidesurface are opposite to each other, wherein the light emitting device iscloser to the first side surface than the second side surface, whereinthe light emitting device has an emission portion facing a part of thesecond side surface, and wherein the upper surface of the resin memberincludes a reflective pattern on an upper portion of the light emittingdevice and a light extraction pattern arranged toward the second sidesurface from the reflective pattern.
 2. The lighting module of claim 1,wherein the third side surface and the fourth side surface extend fromthe first side surface toward the second side surface with a curvedsurface.
 3. The lighting module of claim 1, comprising an optical memberdisposed on the resin member and diffusing light emitted through theresin member.
 4. The lighting module of claim 1, wherein the reflectivepattern includes a flat surface and an inclined surface, and wherein thelight extraction pattern includes a flat surface and an inclinedsurface.
 5. The lighting module of claim 1, wherein the reflectivepattern includes a flat surface and a concave surface, and wherein thelight extraction pattern includes at least two of a flat surface, aninclined surface and a concave surface.
 6. The lighting module of claim1, wherein the light extraction pattern includes a prism-shaped pattern.7. The lighting module of claim 1, wherein a height of the first sidesurface of the resin member is higher than a height of the second sidesurface.
 8. The lighting module of claim 1, wherein the light extractionpattern of the resin member has a concavo-convex pattern having a longlength from the third side surface to the fourth side surface.
 9. Thelighting module of claim 1, wherein the light emitting device, the resinmember, and the substrate overlap in a vertical direction, and whereinan upper end height of the second side surface of the resin member islower than an upper end height of the first side surface.
 10. Thelighting module of claim 1, wherein the resin member is arranged inplural on the substrate, and wherein the resin member is contacteddirectly with sides of the light emitting device.
 11. The lightingmodule of claim 1, wherein the resin member includes a first region inwhich the light emitting device is disposed, and a second region betweenthe first region and the second side surface, the light extractionpattern is disposed on the first and second regions, and the lightextraction pattern of the second region has a gradually lower height asit is farther from the light emitting device.
 12. A lighting modulecomprising: a substrate; a light emitting device disposed on thesubstrate; a resin member disposed on the substrate and sealing thelight emitting device; and a reflecting member disposed between theresin member and the substrate, wherein the resin member includes aplurality of side surfaces and an upper surface, wherein the pluralityof side surfaces includes a first side surface disposed to rear of thelight emitting device, a second side surface disposed in front of thelight emitting device, and third and fourth side surfaces disposedbetween both ends of the first and second side surfaces, wherein thefirst side surface and the second side surface are opposite to eachother, wherein the light emitting device is closer to the first sidesurface than the second side surface, wherein the light emitting devicehas an emission portion facing a part of the second side surface,wherein the upper surface of the resin member includes a reflectiveportion on an upper portion of the light emitting device and a lightextraction portion arranged toward the second side surface from thereflective portion, wherein the resin member includes a first region inwhich the light emitting device is disposed, and a second regiondisposed between the first region and the second side surface, andwherein a distance between the first and second side surfaces is greaterthan a distance between the third and fourth side surfaces.
 13. Thelighting module of claim 12, wherein a minimum thickness of the resinmember 160 is in a range of 1.4 mm to 2 mm from an upper surface of thereflective member.
 14. The lighting module of claim 12, wherein amaximum thickness of the resin member is in a range of 1.7 mm to 4 mmfrom an upper surface of the reflective member.
 15. The lighting moduleof claim 12, a thickness of the first region in the resin member is in arange of 2 mm to 10 mm, and wherein a thickness of the second region issmaller than the thickness of the first region.
 16. The lighting moduleof claim 12, wherein the resin member includes first and second resinmembers adjacent to each other, wherein the light emitting deviceincludes a first light emitting device disposed adjacent to a first sidesurface of the first resin member and a second light emitting devicedisposed adjacent to a first side surface of the second resin member,and wherein a distance between the first and second light emittingdevices is in a range of in a range of 15 to 25 mm.
 17. The lightingmodule of claim 12, wherein the third side surface and the fourth sidesurface extend from the first side surface toward the second sidesurface with a curved surface.
 18. The lighting module of claim 12,comprising an optical member disposed on the resin member and diffusinglight emitted through the resin member.
 19. The lighting module of claim12, wherein the reflective portion includes a flat surface and aninclined surface, and wherein the light extraction portion includes aflat surface and an inclined surface.
 20. The lighting module of claim12, wherein a height of the first side surface of the resin member ishigher than a height of the second side surface, and wherein the lightemitting device, the resin member, and the substrate overlap in avertical direction.